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University  of  Maryland  Basketball 

with 


Charles  G.  "Lefty"  Driesell 
(301)864-4322 

and 


George  Raveling  (Villanova  '60) 
(301)454-4112 


Joe  Harrington  (Maryland  '68) 
(301)454-2126 


Jim  Maloney  (Niagara  '59) 
(301)454-2126 


FRONT  COVER:  President  and  Mrs.  Nixon  greet  Tom  McMillen  at  a  White  House 
reception  for  the  President's  Council  on  Physical  Fitness  and  Sports. 
McMillen  is  a  member  of  the  15  member  council. 


BACK  COVER:         Coach  Lefty  Driesell  poses  with  his  assistant  coaches  on  the  Mary- 
land campus. 


FACTS  ABOUT  MARYLAND 

LOCATION     College  Park,  Maryland 

PRESIDENT Dr.  Wilson  H.  Elkins 

CHANCELLOR    Dr.  Charles  Edwin  Bishop 

FOUNDED   .  .  .  .1807  as  College  of  Medicine  of  Maryland 

1812  changed  name  to  Univ.  of  Maryland 

1920  merged  with  Maryland  Agricultural  College 

ENROLLMENT 32,692 

Men     18,930 
Women     13,762 

ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR    Jim  Kehoe 

ASSISTANT  AD Alfred  J.  Hanlon 

HOME  COURT     Cole  Field  House  (14,500) 

NICKNAME    Terrapins  (Terps) 

COLORS    Red  and  White 

Black  and  Gold 

CONFERENCE     Atlantic  Coast 

MASCOT Testudo  (a  motorized  Terrapin) 

TRAINER     William  "Spider"  Fry 

ASSISTANT  TRAINERS James  Weir 

Dave  Ambrose 

TEAM  PHYSICIAN Dr.  Stanford  A.  Lavine 

SPORTS  INFORMATION  DIRECTOR:   Jack  Zane 

OFFICE      (301)864-4076 

HOME         (301)322-3265 
PROMOTIONS  DIRECTOR:   Russ  Potts 

OFFICE      (301)454-4687 
PRESS  FACILITIES  IN  COLE  FIELD  HOUSE 

Press  Row  —  Courtside 

Radio-TV  -  Upper  West  Press  Box 

Scouts  —  Courtside 

Film  Deck  -  Upper  West  Press  Box 

Western  Union  Facilities  —  Telex  —  Press  Room 

Telephones  located  in  Press  Room 


Driesell  (Duke  '54) 


HEAD  COACH:  Charles  G.  "Lefty' 

(301)864-4322 
ASSISTANT  COACHES 

George  Raveling  (Villanova  '60) 

(301)4544112 
Jim  Maloney  (Niagara  '59) 

(301)454-2126 
Joe  Harrington  (Maryland  '68) 
(301)454-2126 


"The  University  of  Maryland,  in  all  its  branches  and 
divisions  subscribes  to  a  policy  of  equal  education 
opportunity  for  peoples  of  all  races,  creeds  and  ethnic 
origins." 


TABLE  OF  CONTENTS 

The  Terrapin  Varsity  Schedule  for  1970-71     2 

Director  of  Athletics  Jim  Kehoe 3 

Head  Basketball  Coach  "Lefty"  Driesell     4 

Coach  George  Raveling    8 

Coach  Joe  Harrington 8 

Coach  Jim  Maloney    9 

Steve  Kebeck 9 

Meet  the  Terps 10 

Mark  Cartwright 11 

Rich  Porac     12 

Howard  White     13 

Jack  Neal 14 

Jap  Trimble 15 

Darrel  Brown 16 

Bob  Bodell    17 

Len  Elmore 18 

Jim  O'Brien 19 

Charlie  Blank 20 

Tom  McMillen    21 

Radio-TV  Network     22 

Terp  Opponents    23 

Maryland  Freshman  Roster 32 

Maryland  Varsity  Roster     33 

Future  Terps 36 

Maryland  Freshman  Records 38 

1969-70  Varsity  Basketball  Statistics 39 

1969-70  Freshman  Statistics 40 

1970-71  Freshman  Schedule 40 

Maryland  University  Records  Against  All  Opponents    .  .  41 

University  of  Maryland  Basketball  Records 42 

Directory  of  Coaches     45 

Year-by-Year  Results     46 

"Lefty's"  Basketball  School     55 

University  Officials     56 

Varsity  Game-by-Game  Scoring  1970-71    59 

University  of  Maryland 60 


TERRAPINS  ALL-TIME  SCORERS 


Gene  Shue 

1.  Gene  Shue,  1952-54 

2.  WiUHetzel,  1967-70 

3.  Jay  McMillen,  1965-67 

4.  Bob  Kessler,  1954-56 

5.  Gary  Ward,  1964-66 

6.  Pete  Johnson,  1967-69 

7.  Bob  O'Brien,  1955-57 

8.  AlBunge,  1957-60 

9.  Jerry  Greenspan,  1960-63 
10.  Nick  Davis,  1954-57 


McMillen 

1,397 
1,370 
1,300 
1,266 
1,094 

987 

972 

935 

875 

861 


THE  TERRAPIN 
VARSITY  SCHEDULE 
FOR   1971-72 


December 

1 

(Wednesday) 

4 

(Saturday) 

8 

(Wednesday) 

13 

(Monday) 

17 

(Friday) 

20 

(Monday) 

22 

(Wednesday) 

29 

(Wednesday) 

30 

(Thursday) 

5 

(Wednesday) 

8 

(Saturday) 

10 

(Monday) 

22 

(Saturday) 

25 

(Tuesday) 

29 

(Saturday) 

31 

(Monday) 

Februa 

ry 

5 

(Saturday) 

9 

(Wednesday) 

12 

(Saturday) 

16 

(Wednesday) 

19 

(Saturday) 

22 

(Tuesday) 

26 

(Saturday) 

March 

1 

(Wednesday) 

4 

(Saturday) 

9 

(Thursday) 

10 

(Friday) 

11 

(Saturday) 

Brown  in  Cole  Field  House  8:00 

George  Washington  at  Fort  Myer  8:30 

Virginia  in  Charlottesville,  Va.  8:00 

Georgetown  in  Cole  Field  House  7:00 

Canisius  in  Cole  Field  House  8:00 

Loyola  in  Baltimore  Civic  Center  8:30 

Holy  Cross  in  Hampton,  Va.  8:00 
Maryland  Invitational  Tournament 

St.  John's  vs  Harvard  7:00 

Maryland  vs  Western  Kentucky  9:00 
Maryland  Invitational  Tournament 

First  round  Losers  meet  7:30 

First  round  Winners  meet  9:30 


1972 
Georgia  Tech 

Syracuse 
Bowling  Green 


1973 
Boston  College 

Holy  Cross 
Michigan  State 


N.  C.  State  in  Cole  Field  House  8 

Clemson  in  Clemson,  S.C.  2 

Wake  Forest  in  Greensboro,  N.C.  8 

Navy  in  Norfolk,  Virginia  8 

Buffalo  in  Cole  Field  House  8 

North  Carolina  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.C.  2 

N.  C.  State  in  Raleigh,  N.C.  8 


00 
00 
00 
30 
30 
00 
00 


Duke  in  Cole  Field  House  2:00 

Duquesne  in  Cole  Field  House  8:00 
Long  Island  in  Madison  Square  Garden       3:30 

North  Carolina  in  Cole  Field  House  9:00 

Clemson  in  Cole  Field  House  3:30 

Richmond  in  Cole  Field  House  8:30 

Duke  in  Durham,  N.C.  2:00 


Wake  Forest  in  Cole  Field  House  8:00 

Virginia  in  Cole  Field  House  8:30 

Atlantic  Coast  Conference 

Tournament 
Greensboro,  North  Carolina 


MARYLAND  INVITATIONAL  TOURNAMENT 

Maryland  will  host  the  first  Annual  MIT  on  De- 
cember 29-30.  The  first  tournament  will  feature 
Harvard,  St.  John's  and  Western  Kentucky  all 
nationally  ranked  teams.  The  Terps  will  meet  Western 
Kentucky  in  the  second  game  on  Dec.  29.  Future 
opponents  in  the  MIT  include  UCLA  in  1974. 


Terps'  Highest  National 

Rankings 

in  School's  History 

1957-58 

Associated  Press 

1. 

West  Virginia 

2. 

Cincinnati 

3. 

Kansas  State 

4. 

San  Francisco 

5. 

Temple 

6. 

MARYLAND 

7. 

Kansas 

8. 

Notre  Dame 

9. 

Kentucky 

10. 

Duke 

International 

News  Service 

1. 

West  Virginia 

2. 

Cincinnati 

3. 

San  Francisco 

4. 

Kansas  State 

5. 

Temple 

6. 

Dayton 

7. 

Notre  Dame 

8. 

Bradley 

9. 

MARYLAND 

10. 

Kansas 

United  Press 

1. 

West  Virginia 

2. 

Cincinnati 

3. 

San  Francisco 

4. 

Kansas  State 

5. 

Temple 

6. 

MARYLAND 

7. 

Notre  Dame 

8. 

Kansas 

9. 

Dayton 

10. 

Indiana 

All-Americas  at  Maryland 

1931— Louis  "Bozey"  Berger  —  Selected  by 
New  York  Sports  Writer's  Assn. 

1932-Louis  "Bozey"  Berger  -  Selected  by 
New  York  Sports  Writer's  Assn. 

1953— Eugene  Shue  —  Second  team  Helm's 
Foundation. 

1954— Eugene  Shue  —  Second  team  Helm's 
Foundation  —  16th  man  on  Associated 
Press  Poll. 

1960— Al  Bunge  —  Honorable  Mention  Asso- 
ciated Press. 


DIRECTOR  OF  ATHLETICS 
JIM  KEHOE 


James  H.  Kehoe  became  Director  of  Athletics  at  the 
University  of  Maryland  July  1,  1969,  upon  the  retirement 
of  William  W.  Cobey,  who  had  held  the  post  since  1956.  In 
his  first  year  as  AD  the  Terps  won  100  athletic  contests,  six 
of  the  12  ACC  team  titles  and  captured  the  ACC's  Car- 
michael  Cup  for  the  seventh  time. 

As  Maryland  track  coach  for  23  years,  Kehoe  saw  his 
teams  capture  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  championship 
in  all  but  one  year  of  the  ACC's  existence. 

In  1954,  first  year  of  the  conference,  Maryland  took  the 
conference  crown.  After  North  Carolina  won  the  title  in 
1955,  Kehoe's  teams  regained  the  championship  which 
Maryland  has  now  held  for  15  straight  years. 

Since  he  became  head  track  and  cross  country  coach  in 
1946,  Kehoe  has  directed  his  teams  to  a  total  of  47 
Southern  Conference  and  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
championships. 

In  dual  meet  competition  his  teams  were  undefeated  for 
the  past  eight  years,  and  the  track  team  had  a  winning 
streak  of  27  straight  victories  and  the  cross  country  team 
23  at  his  retirement. 

Maryland  won  the  I.C.4-A.  track  title  in  1965,  '66,  and 
'69  to  claim  Eastern  track  supremacy. 

Perhap's  Kehoe's  greater  moment  was  reserved  for  his 
final  season.  In  his  final  meet  as  head  coach,  by  the  margin 
of  a  single  point,  Maryland  defeated  heavily  favored  Villa- 
nova  for  the  I.C.4-A.  outdoor  championship.  By  his  own 
admission  Kehoe  declared  this  was  his  greatest  track  victory 
during  his  25  years  of  coaching. 

A  native  of  Bel  Air,  Maryland  where  he  starred  in  several 
sports,  Kehoe  entered  Maryland  in  1936  and  concentrated 
on  track  and  cross  country.  He  lettered  in  all  three  of  his 
varsity  seasons,  was  undefeated  in  dual  meet  competition 
during  this  period,  and  won  several  Southern  Conference 
titles  in  indoor  and  outdoor  competition,  as  well  as  holding 
University  records  in  the  £80  yard  and  two  mile  runs. 

While  a  student  at  Maryland  Kehoe  was  president  of  the 
Men's  League  and  a  member  of  Omicron  Delta  Kappa 
National  Honorary  Fraternity.  His  responsibilities  at  Mary- 
land prior  to  his  appointment  as  Athletic  Director  included: 
Head  Track  and  Cross  Country  Coach,  Associate  Professor 
of  Physical  Education,  and  Director  of  Intramural  Athletics. 
He  also  holds  an  Honorary  Doctors  Degree  from  Steed 
College  in  Tennessee. 


.4^*^3k 


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During  World  War  II  Kehoe  served  as  an  officer  with  the 
81st  Infantry  Division  in  the  Pacific,  rising  from  the  rank  of 
private  to  lieutenant  colonel  upon  retirement.  He  partici- 
pated in  the  Philippine  Islands  and  Central  Pacific 
Campaigns  and  was  awarded  the  Bronze  Star,  American  Ser- 
vice Medal,  Asiatic  Pacific  Medal,  Victory  Medal,  and 
Philippine  Liberation  Medal  while  in  service. 

Kehoe  is  married  to  the  former  Barbara  Riggs  England,  a 
1943  Maryland  graduate.  The  Kehoes  have  four  children: 
daughters  Courtney  Ann  25,  Barbara  Sue  23,  Mary  Lou  17, 
and  a  son  Jim  24.  Courtney  Ann  and  Jim  are  graduates  of 
the  University. 


HEAD 

BASKETBALL 

COACH 


*   *:  >^^ 


"Lefty"  Driesell 


When  Charles  G.  "Lefty"  Driesell  assumed  the  coaching 
duties  at  the  University  of  Maryland  he  cited  three  major 
goals  for  the  Maryland  basketball  program.  They  were 
"National  Prominence",  "National  Ranking"  and  the 
"National  Championship". 

Despite  three  consecutive  losing  seasons  prior  to  Lefty's 
new  era,  the  Terps  have  not  had  a  losing  season  since  he 
took  over.  They  achieved  "National  Prominence"  last  year 
through  a  combination  of  upsets  on  the  basketball  court 
and  Lefty's  recruiting  program.  His  1970-71  freshman  team 
was  rated  the  best  in  the  nation  with  a  16-0  record. 

The  1971-72  team  has  achieved  pre-season  rankings 
ranging  from  first  to  twentieth  in  the  nation  and  is  well  on 
the  way  to  Lefty's  second  major  goal. 

The  new  era  for  Maryland  basketball  began  in  March  of 
1969  when  Director  of  Athletics  Jim  Kehoe  announced  the 
appointment  of  Driesell  as  the  Head  Coach  of  the  Terra- 
pins. 

Driesell,  established  as  one  of  the  finest  basketball 
coaches  in  the  nation,  immediately  began  his  drive  to  bring 
Maryland  basketball  into  national  prominence.  His  first 
move  was  the  appointment  of  George  Raveling,  former 
Villanova  star,  as  his  top  assistant.  He  then  added  Jim 
Maloney,  former  Niagara  head  coach,  and  Joe  Harrington,  a 
Maryland  favorite,  to  his  staff. 

The  new  era  for  Maryland  basketball  has  now  developed 
into  a  "New  Look"  for  the  Terrapins.  Only  one  member  of 
the  1971-72  team  was  enrolled  at  Maryland  when  Lefty 
took  over.  The  current  team  is  the  tallest  to  ever  represent 


the  Terps  and  last  years'  freshman  squad  was  only  the  sec- 
ond undefeated  team  in  Maryland  basketball  history. 

One  of  the  earlier  moves  made  by  the  incomparable 
Driesell  was  convincing  Terrapin  fans  they  had  better  join 
the  crowds  in  Cole  Field  House  early  or  they  would  be  at 
home  listening  to  WMAL  Radio.  The  usual  promotion  ad- 
vertisements in  the  local  papers  had  the  addition  "better 
buy  your  season  tickets  now.  Remember  Lefty  told  you 
so."  The  last  season  ticket  application  for  1970-71  was  ac- 
cepted on  February  28,  1970  and  all  were  renewed  for  the 
1971-72  season. 

The  Terrapins  completed  the  regular  season  in  his  first 
year  with  a  13-12  record,  the  first  time  in  four  years  the 
Terps  had  finished  the  regular  season  with  a  winning  record. 
The  first  freshman  team  recorded  a  12-4  record. 

Last  year  the  Terps  moved  up  with  a  14-11  regular 
season  mark  while  the  freshmen  were  16-0. 

There  were  7,800  fans  in  Cole  Field  House  to  greet 
Lefty  in  his  debut.  When  the  Terrapins  closed  his  first 
season  against  Virginia  there  were  14,200  on  hand  to  wit- 
ness the  1 3th  victory  of  the  season. 

Last  year  there  were  12,800  at  the  opener  with  Delaware 
and  again  the  Terps  closed  the  season  with  Virginia  in  Cole 
Field  House,  winning  their  14th  game,  in  overtime,  before 
14,478. 

Maryland  attendance  records  were  broken  each  year  as 
180,842  attended  15  games  in  Cole  Field  House  last  year 
and  273,553  witnessed  the  26  games  for  the  season. 

Seven  of  the  home  games  were  televised  by  WMAL-TV 
last  year  and  at  least  nine  will  be  televised  this  year  with 
WJZ  in  Baltimore  originating  telecasts  of  four  games.  Four 
games  are  scheduled  for  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  Net- 
work and  three  for  National  viewing. 

Lefty  literally  began  at  the  bottom  in  establishing  his 
program  at  Maryland.  He  completely  renovated  the  basket- 
ball facilities  in  Cole  Field  House.  The  dressing  room  facili- 
ties, training  room  and  basketball  offices  all  have  benefited 
from  his  tireless  devotion  to  perfection  and  serve  as  a  testi- 
monial to  his  dedication  to  making  Maryland  basketball  the 
best. 


A  press  room  has  been  added  just  off  the  main  floor  and 
will  serve  both  as  an  interview  area  and  work  room  for  the 
visiting  media. 

The  Cole  Field  House  Court  has  been  refinished  and 
Maryland  Terrapins  in  large  block  letters  added  at  the  end 
of  the  court.  New  uniforms  with  names  on  the  back  are 
another  contribution  of  the  Terp  Mentor. 


In  the  short  time  Lefty  had  to  devote  to  recruiting  for 
his  first  freshman  team  he  did  an  outstanding  job.  He  imme- 
diately returned  to  his  native  state  of  Virginia  and  per- 
suaded the  two  top  high  school  stars  in  the  state  to  con- 
tinue their  education  at  the  University  of  Maryland  They 
were  Jim  O'Brien,  16.3  and  Howard  White,  15.6,  the  top 
two  scorers  for  the  varsity  last  year. 

When  Lefty  had  a  full  recruiting  year  to  work  he  merely 
came  up  with  the  "recruit  of  the  year"  in  Tom  McMillen, 
rated  by  everyone  as  the  top  high  school  player  in  the 
nation,  two  of  the  most  sought  after  players  in  the  New 
York  area  in  Len  Elmore  and  Jap  Trimble,  Mark  Cart- 
wright,  an  excellent  prospect  from  the  Chicago  area  and 
Rich  Porac  an  excellent  guard  from  Monroeville,  Pa.  This 
was  the  tallest  freshman  team  to  ever  represent  the  Terps. 

His  current  freshman  team  again  includes  the  "recruit  of 
the  year"  in  Tom  Roy,  Owen  Brown  a  consensus  All- 
American  from  LaGrange,  Illinois  and  Varick  Cutler  also  an 
Ail-American  from  North  Tonawanda,  New  York.  Donnie 
White  and  Billy  Hahn  are  excellent  guard  candidates  for 
Coach  Joe  Harrington's  freshmen. 

It  was  only  fitting  that  Lefty  should  begin  building  his 
program  around  two  Virginia  products.  He  was  born  in  Nor- 
folk, Virginia  on  December  25,  1931  and  is  a  graduate  of 
Norfolk's  Granby  High.  He  went  on  to  Duke  and  received 
his  degree  from  there  in  1954.  His  coaching  career  began  at 
Granby  High  and  includes  two  years  at  Newport  News 
High. 


Lefty  moved  on  to  Davidson  College  in  1960  and  imme- 
diately transformed  a  previously  dormant  basketball  pro- 
gram into  one  of  the  Nation's  best.  He  compiled  a  nine  year 
record  of  176-65,  and  the  Southern  Conference  selected 
him  "Coach  of  the  Year"  in  1963,  1964,  1965,  and  1966, 
an  unmatched  honor. 

Lefty's  Davidson  teams  finished  in  the  top  ten  national 
rankings  in  four  of  his  last  six  years.  He  has  had  only  one 
losing  season  in  his  coaching  career  and  that  came  in  his 
first  year  at  Davidson. 


COACH  DRIESELL'S  RECORD 

1955-56       Granby  High  J. V. 
1956-57       Granby  High  Varsity 
1957-59       Newport  News  Varsity 
Four  Year  High  School  Record: 
(included  a  57  game  winning  streak 
and  State  Championship) 
1960-61        Davidson 
1961-62       Davidson 
1962-63       Davidson 
1963-64       Davidson 
1964-65       Davidson 
1965-66       Davidson 
1966-67       Davidson 
1967-68       Davidson 
1968-69       Davidson 
1969-70       Maryland 
1970-71        Maryland 


ELEVEN  YEAR  COLLEGIATE  RECORD: 
Won  203    Lost  90 

1965-66  Southern  Conference  Champions 
1967-68  Southern  Conference  Champions 
1968-69       Southern  Conference  Champions 

Davidson's  National  Rankings  with  Coach  Driesell 

1964  10th 

1965  6th 

1968  8th 

1969  3rd 


Won 

18 

Lost 

4 

Won 

15 

Lost 

5 

Won 

64 

Lost 

6 

Won 

97 

Lost 

15 

Won 

9 

Lost 

14 

Won 

14 

Lost 

11 

Won 

20 

Lost 

7 

Won 

22 

Lost 

4 

Won 

24 

Lost 

2 

Won 

21 

Lost 

7 

Won 

15 

Lost 

12 

Won 

24 

Lost 

5 

Won 

27 

Lost 

3 

Won 

13 

Lost 

13 

Won 

14 

Lost 

12 

Coach  Driesell's  Ail-Time  College  Coaching  Statistics 


Shooting 

Rebounds 

See 

ring 

Opp. 

Opp. 

Year 

FGA 

FGM 

Pet 

FTA 

FTM 

Pet 

Avg 

Avg 

Avg 

Avg 

W 

L 

1960-61 

1,321 

571 

.432 

596 

407 

.683 

41.6 

38.9 

67.4 

69.8 

9 

14 

1961-62 

1,411 

617 

.437 

679 

493 

.726 

42.7 

39.4 

69.1 

69.8 

14 

11 

1962-63 

1,632 

792 

.485 

641 

477 

.744 

42.8 

33.9 

76.3 

65.8 

20 

7 

1963-64 

1,644 

894 

.543 

722 

534 

.739 

45.2 

34.3 

89.3 

70.5 

22 

4 

1964-65 

1,784 

908 

.509 

672 

484 

.720 

47.3 

38.4 

88.5 

70.9 

24 

2 

1965-66 

1,713 

877 

.512 

739 

563 

.762 

43.2 

37.4 

82.8 

70.8 

21 

7 

1966-67 

1,645 

76 

.466 

709 

537 

.757 

43.0 

40.1 

76.6 

71.1 

15 

12 

1967-68 

1,791 

885 

.494 

795 

562 

.708 

46.6 

37.6 

80.5 

68.9 

24 

5 

1968-69 

2,105 

984 

.467 

886 

645 

.728 

51.0 

39.2 

87.1 

73.6 

27 

3 

1969-70 

1,709 

781 

.457 

586 

417 

.712 

42.5 

41.6 

76.1 

74.7 

13 

13 

1970-71 

1,650 

735 

.445 

715 

480 

.715 

44.4 

40.3 

75.0 

73.4 

14 

12 

3>J 


GEORGE  RAVELING 


When  Lefty  Driesell  became  head  basketball  coach  at  Maryland,  he  vowed 
he  would  make  the  Terps  the  "UCLA  of  the  East."  The  first  move  he  made 
was  to  hire  George  Raveling  as  one  of  his  chief  architects. 

Raveling  had  played  an  integral  part  in  the  emergence  of  Villanova  as  a 
national  cage  power,  both  as  a  player  and  a  coach.  In  his  junior  year  Villanova 
was  ranked  tenth  in  the  nation  and  climbed  to  ninth  the  following  year,  with 
George  as  the  team  captain.  He  received  All-American  recognition  and  was 
drafted  third  by  the  Old  Philadelphia  Warriors. 
After  graduation  from  Villanova  with  a  Bachelor  of  Science  degree  in  Economics,  Raveling  abandoned  a  pro  basketball 
career  to  go  to  work  as  a  marketing  analyst  for  Sun  Oil  Company.  In  1964  he  returned  to  his  alma  mater  as  an  assistant 
coach.  During  this  period  Villanova  reached  the  top  ten  three  of  the  next  four  years.  It  was  during  this  time  that  the  "Rave" 
gained  a  national  reputation  as  a  "super"  recruiter.  His  defense  expertise,  learned  under  defensive  genius  Jack  Kraft,  has 
proven  invaluable  to  Maryland. 

BASKETBALL  NEWS  ranked  the  1970-71  freshman  team  coached  by  George  as  the  No.  1  frosh  unit  in  the  nation.  Their 
record  was  16-0,  the  best  in  modern  Maryland  basketball  history. 

When  George  is  not  recruiting  or  coaching,  he  is  in  heavy  demand  as  a  banquet  speaker  and  rebounding  lecturer.  He  has 
been  well  received  from  coast  to  coast. 

At  the  suggestion  of  many  of  his  coaching  colleagues,  Raveling  is  presently  writing  a  book  on  the  fundamental  aspects  of 
rebounding  which  will  be  published  June  1 ,  1972.  The  title  of  the  book  will  be  "War  on  the  Boards." 

The  thirty-three  year  old  coach  is  married  to  the  former  Vivian  James  of  San  Francisco,  California,  who  is  a  United 
Airlines  stewardess.  They  make  their  home  in  Silver  Spring,  Maryland. 


JOE  HARRINGTON 

The  youngest  member  of  the  Maryland  Coaching  Staff  is  twenty-five  year 
old  Joe  Harrington  who  played  three  years  1965-67  for  the  Terps.  He  was  one 
of  New  England's  greatest  scholastic  basketball  players,  at  Morse  High  School, 
in  Bath,  Maine. 

Coach  Harrington  was  a  spirited  player,  and  a  sound  fundamentalist.  With 
qualities  like  this  he  is  certain  to  excel  in  his  new  duties  as  Head  Coach  of  the 
Maryland  freshmen. 

He  graduated  with  a  Bachelor  of  Science  in  Physical  Education  and  then 
entered  graduate  school,  to  receive  his  Masters  Degree  in  Physical  Education. 

Besides  his  normal  coaching  duties,  Joe  is  responsible  for  all  phases  of  the  basketball  department  academic  guidance 
program.  He  is  especially  proud  of  the  teams'  fine  grade  point  average. 

Lefty  Driesell  says,  "In  my  opinion,  Joe  Harrington  is  one  of  the  brightest  young  coaches  in  the  country  today." 

Joe  was  married  to  Ann  Schopfer  on  November  27  of  this  year. 


JIM  MALONEY 

Jim  Maloney  is  a  man  with  a  mission  ...  a  mission  of  helping  Maryland 
climb  to  the  top  rung  of  the  collegiate  basketball  ladder. 

Jim  is  a  winner,  and  has  the  record  to  prove  it.  His  six-year  record  for  high 
school  and  college  prior  to  coming  to  Maryland  was  an  amazing  126-47.  His 
1965  Lockport,  N.Y.  High  School  team  posted  a  brilliant  20-1  ledger  and 
won  the  Niagara  Frontier  and  Western  New  York  Championship  (the  first 
championship  in  school  history). 

Niagara  University  beckoned  the  Philadelphia,  Pa.  native,  and  Maloney 
responded  by  taking  the  Purple  Eagles  to  a  winning  season.  Just  a  year  before  Maloney  arrived,  Niagara  had  posted  a  dismal 
4-21  slate. 

A  star  guard  for  the  Purple  Eagles  in  his  playing  days,  Jim  finished  as  the  eighth  highest  scorer  in  Niagara  history,  and 
served  as  co-captain  of  the  team  his  senior  year. 

A  shooting  whiz  in  college,  Jim  now  teaches  the  Terp  players  the  finer  points  of  offense.  He  recruited  and  coached  all-time 
college  great  Calvin  Murphy  for  Niagara. 

A  man  on  the  move  365  days  a  year,  Jim  is  a  master  recruiter.  Coach  Driesell  says  of  Maloney:  "Jim  is  one  of  the  finest 
recruiters  in  the  nation.  He's  a  tireless  worker,  and  his  knowledge  of  the  game  is  tremendous.  I  never  hesitate  to  ask  his  advice 
on  certain  strategy  or  techniques." 

Active  in  the  Fellowship  of  Christian  Athletes  and  the  CYO,  Jim  is  a  devoted  family  man.  Married  to  the  former  Barbara 
Ann  Marrone,  the  Maloneys  are  the  parents  of  four  children:  Peter  (8),  Paul  (6),  Sarah  (4),  and  Chris  (3). 

"My  goal  is  for  Maryland  to  win  the  National  Championship.  I  try  to  recruit  the  type  of  individual  who  possesses  the 
qualities  of  greatness—he  must  be  dedicated  both  on  the  court  and  in  the  classroom. 

Attitude  and  teamwork  are  so  important.  I  don't  want  to  coach  selfish  players.  I  feel  championship  teams  are  molded  by 
young  men  who  want  to  be  winners  in  life  as  well  as  on  the  basketball  court. 

I  love  my  work— both  recruiting  and  coaching.  One  of  the  reasons  I  came  to  Maryland  was  to  accept  the  challenge  here.  I 
respect  both  Coach  Driesell  and  Athletic  Director  Jim  Kehoe.  Both  men  are  dedicated  in  their  ambitions  to  make  Maryland 
number  one. 

Coach  Driesell  demands  a  lot,  but  he  also  commands  the  respect  of  our  staff  and  the  team.  We're  a  cohesive,  compatible 
staff  with  one  goal— to  make  Maryland  number  onel 


STEVE  KEBECK  -  GRADUATE  ASSISTANT 

A  product  of  the  richest  reservoir  of  basketball  talent  in  the  nation  -  New 
York  City  playground  basketball. 

Steve  was  one  of  the  first  players  Coach  Driesell  recruited  for  Maryland. 
After  an  illustrious  career  under  Coach  Marvin  Kessler  at  Van  Buren  High 
School  in  Queens,  Steve  enrolled  at  Gardner  Webb  Junior  College  (North 
Carolina).  With  Steve  at  the  controls  and  Artis  Gilmore  dominating  the 
boards,  Gardner-Webb  gained  national  ranking.  His  stellar  performances 
earned  him  Ail-American  junior  college  recognition.  At  Maryland  Kebeck's 
greatest  moments  came  against  ACC  Champs  South  Carolina.  He  scored  30 
points  in  two  games  against  his  old  New  York  buddies.  In  his  senior  year  he 
won  the  Aubinoe  Award,  which  goes  to  the  outstanding  senior  player. 

A  graduate  of  the  College  of  Education,  Steve  now  makes  his  home  in 
Hyattsville,  Maryland.  He  is  married  to  the  former  Carolyn  Stone  of  Balti- 
more, Maryland.  The  Kebecks  have  a  two-year  old  son  Brian. 


MEET  THE  TERPS 


JIM  O'BRIEN 


10 


MARK  CARTWRIGHT 

7-0,  205,  18,  Sophomore 
Morton  Grove,  Illinois 


REACH:    108  inches 


Freshman 


GAMES      FGM      FGA      PCT      FTM      FTA      PCT      REBS      PF-DSQ     PTS      AVG 

16  97  187      .519       57         77       .740       168  33-0         251       15.7 


Cartwright  had  a  fine  freshman  year  finishing  the  season  with  a  32  point  perfor- 
mance against  the  Virginia  freshmen.  He  has  grown  a  full  inch  since  enrolling  at 
Maryland.  He  was  a  High  School  Ail-American  at  Niles  West  where  he  Captained  the 
team  to  a  20-3  season  and  league  championship.  Honor  student  in  high  school.  Had  a 
15.7  scoring  average  and  10.5  rebounding  average  for  freshmen.  Moved  inside  for 
freshmen  for  last  six  games  and  averaged  23  points  there.  In  high  school  he  averaged 
27.2  points  per  game  and  17.2  rebounds  along  with  six  blocked  shots  a  game.  Excep- 
tional outside  shooter  for  size.  Was  6-3  as  a  freshman  in  high  and  6-1  1  when  he  entered 
Maryland.  Bill  Schmurr  his  high  school  coach  calls  him  "Niles  West's  greatest  athlete 
ever"  and  this  includes  Jim  Hart,  quarterback  of  the  St.  Louis  Cardinals.  He  ran  the 
half  mile  on  the  track  team.  He  is  an  excellent  artist  and  is  majoring  in  Architecture. 


11 


10 
RICH   PORAC 

6-0,  175,  19,  Sophomore 
Monroeville,  Pennsylvania 

REACH:   90  inches 


itf 


Freshman 


GAMES      FGM      FGA     PCT      FTM      FTA     PCT      REBS     PF-DSQ     PTS     AVG 

16  75         143      .524       35         50      .700         22  25-0         185      11.6 


A  fine  playmaker  for  the  freshmen  he  also  scored  1 1 .6  points  a  game  and  1 1  assists 
a  game  for  the  freshmen.  Scored  his  high  of  23  against  Richmond  last  year.  Set  a  new 
record  with  19  assists  against  the  Virginia  Freshmen.  National  Honor  Society  student 
in  high  where  he  captained  the  basketball  team  to  a  1 9-3  record  and  league  champion- 
ship. Averaged  18  points  a  game  in  high  with  a  single  game  mark  of  37.  Scored  950 
points  for  varsity  career  at  Gateway  high  where  he  played  for  Mr.  Art  Betts.  All-State 
selection.  He  started  for  three  straight  years  in  high.  Roomed  with  Tom  McMillen  at 
the  Dapper  Dan  High  School  All-American  game  where  he  was  a  starting  guard.  Also  a 
fine  defensive  player.  He  plays  the  accordian,  sings  in  the  choir  and  likes  to  work  on 
the  trampoline.  He  is  a  Pre-Dental  major. 


12 


_*■ 


I  SI 


13 

HOWARD  WHITE 

6-1.  165,  21,  Junior 
Hampton,  Virginia 


REACH:   94  inches 


1970-1971 

3 

15 

16 

17 

24 

12 

33 

8 

X 

24 

14 

24 

3 

4 

0 

13 

5 

38 

12 

26 

12 

23 

20 

22 

2 

19 


Buffalo 

Clemson 

Delaware 

Duke 

Georgetown 

George  Washington 

Lehigh 

Loyola 

Miami  (Fla.) 

North  Carolina 

N.  C.  State 

Richmond 

Seton  Hall 

South  Carolina 

Tampa 

Virginia 

Wake  Forest 

West  Virginia 


GAMES      FGM      FGA      PCT      FTM      FTA      PCT      REBS      PF-DSQ     PTS      AVG 

Freshman  16  146         297      .492      49         64       .766         41  31-0         341      21.3 

Sophomore  25  157         363      .433      75       107       .701         74  41-1         389      15.6 


A  healthy  Howard  White  is  a  fine  basketball  player.  He  was  hampered  throughout 
his  freshman  year  by  an  injury  suffered  in  high  school.  He  had  a  fine  sophomore  year 
as  the  Terp  point  man.  He  scored  389  points  for  a  15.6  average.  He  set  a  South 
Carolina  Coliseum  record  with  his  38  points  there  and  scored  33  against  Georgetown  in 
the  next  game.  He  has  worked  hard  to  strengthen  the  knee  during  the  past  two 
summers  and  it  has  apparently  been  worth  while.  He  was  a  high  school  Ail-American  at 
Kecoughtan  and  was  the  MVP  and  Captain  of  the  team.  As  a  freshman  he  scored  341 
points  for  a  21.3  average  although  playing  briefly  in  several  games.  As  a  freshman  his 
high  game  was  34  against  George  Washington.  In  his  only  scoreless  game  for  the  varsity 
he  did  not  take  a  shot  against  North  Carolina  State  while  concentrating  on  getting  the 
ball  inside.  He  is  a  major  scoring  threat  especially  one-on-one. 


13 


1970-1971 
0 

X        2 
X 

4        0 
4 


2 
0 

X 


19 
X 
2 

13 
X 

8 
3 
X 


20 
JACK  NEAL 

6-8,  225,  20,  Junior 
San  Diego,  California 

REACH:    103  inches 


Buffalo 

Clemson 

Delaware 

Duke 

Georgetown 

George  Washington 

Lehigh 

Loyola 

Miami  (Fla.) 

North  Carolina 

N.  C.  State 

Richmond 

Seton  Hall 

South  Carolina 

Tampa 

Virginia 

Wake  Forest 

West  Virginia 


GAMES      FGM      FGA     PCT      FTM 

Freshman  16  49         103      .476       13 

Sophomore  18  30  58     .517       22 


FTA     PCT      REBS     PF-DSQ     PTS     AVG 

30       .433       116  46^1         111        6.9 

39       .564         61  26-1  82       4.6 


Jack  played  in  1 8  of  26  games  as  a  sophomore  and  was  a  part  time  starter  near  the 
close  of  the  season.  His  top  game  was  a  1 9  point  performance  against  North  Carolina 
and  in  the  next  game  he  contributed  13  points  to  a  56-55  decision  over  Seton  Hall  in 
the  Garden.  He  also  had  1 2  rebounds  against  Seton  Hall.  He  was  the  Captain  of  his  high 
school  team  and  All-City  in  San  Diego.  He  scored  1 1 1  points  for  the  freshmen  and  had 
116  rebounds  with  most  of  his  scoring  and  rebounding  coming  late  in  the  freshman 
season.  He  was  one  of  the  most  improved  players  at  the  close  of  his  freshman  year  and 
has  continued  to  show  this  improvement.  His  top  freshman  games  were  1 5  points  and 
15  rebounds  against  American,  and  18  points  and  14  rebounds  against  Old  Dominion. 
He  will  be  a  valuable  reserve  up  front. 


14 


22 

JAP  TRIMBLE 

6-3,  185,  19,  Sophomore 
New  York  City,  New  York 

REACH:   99  inches 


Freshman 


GAMES      FGM      FGA      PCT      FTM      FTA      PCT      REBS      PF-DSQ      PTS      AVG 

16  140        267     .524      40        62      .645        88  37-0        320     20.0 


Jap  (Japeth)  was  a  high  school  All-American  at  Power  Memorial  in  New  York  City. 
He  continued  his  All-American  play  last  year,  averaging  20  points  a  game  with  320  in 
16  games  for  the  undefeated  freshmen.  He  hit  52  percent  of  his  shots  from  the  floor 
last  year.  His  top  scoring  game  was  37  against  Virginia  in  the  final  game  of  the  season. 
He  also  had  30  against  George  Washington  with  a  low  of  1  1 .  While  playing  for  Mr.  Jack 
Kuhnert  in  high  he  was  a  member  of  the  National  Honor  Society  and  was  a  three  year 
starter  on  the  varsity  basketball  team.  He  is  a  fine  one-on-one  player  and  has  the 
quickness  to  be  outstanding  in  defense.  His  high  school  team  had  a  combined  53-9 
record  while  he  had  a  single  game  high  of  40  points.  His  high  school  team  was  ranked 
number  one  as  was  his  freshman  team  last  year.  He  is  a  sociology  major  and  wants  to 
become  a  FBI  agent. 


15 


33 
DARRELL  BROWN 

6-6,  210,  20,  Junior 
Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania 


1970-1971 
7 

0        3 
0 

X       X 
0 

24 


9 
1 
0 


10 
4 

10 
X 
X 

X 
X 
6 


REACH:    104  inches 


Buffalo 

Clemson 

Delaware 

Duke 

Georgetown 

George  Washington 

Lehigh 

Loyola 

Miami  (Fla.) 

North  Carolina 

N.  C.  State 

Richmond 

Seton  Hall 

South  Carolina 

Tampa 

Virginia 

Wake  Forest 

West  Virginia 


GAMES 

FGM 

FGA 

PCT 

FTM 

Freshman 

14 

84 

178 

.475 

38 

Sophomore 

18 

29 

61 

.475 

24 

FTA     PCT      REBS     PF-DSQ     PTS     AVG 

66      .576       160  44-3         206      14.7 

43       .558         59  19-0  82       4.6 


Darrell  played  in  18  of  26  varsity  games  as  a  sophomore,  scoring  82  points  along 
with  59  rebounds.  His  top  game  was  24  points  and  10  rebounds  against  George  Wash- 
ington in  a  69-67  win.  He  also  scored  10  against  Richmond  and  North  Carolina.  He  was 
a  three  sport  athlete  in  high  and  MVP  in  basketball.  He  suffered  a  broken  foot  last  fall 
but  was  ready  to  play  by  the  opening  game.  Although  only  6-6  he  has  a  1 04  inch  reach 
and  can  jump  with  the  best.  He  can  play  up  front  or  on  the  wing.  As  a  freshman  he 
averaged  14.7  points  a  game  and  pulled  in  160  rebounds  in  14  games.  His  top  game  as  a 
freshman  was  also  against  George  Washington  as  he  scored  26  points  with  18  rebounds. 
He  also  had  1 8  rebounds  against  Kings  College  and  Villanova  as  a  freshman.  He  will  be 
a  valuable  reserve  for  the  varsity  this  year. 


16 


35 

BOB   BODELL 

6-4,  180,  21,  Junior 
Frankfort,  Kentucky 

REACH:   99  inches 


1970-1971 
9 

2        5 
8 

2        4 
8 


10 
3 

7 


6 

10 
7 
0 
0 

2 
0 

7 


Buffalo 

Clemson 

Delaware 

Duke 

Georgetown 

George  Washington 

Lehigh 

Loyola 

Miami  (Fla.) 

North  Carolina 

N.  C.  State 

Richmond 

Seton  Hall 

South  Carolina 

Tampa 

Virginia 

Wake  Forest 

West  Virginia 


GAMES      FGM      FGA      PCT      FTM      FTA      PCT      REBS      PF-DSQ      PTS      AVG 

Freshman  16  103         168      .613      41         62       .661       102  43-1         247      15.4 

Sophomore  26  40  83      .482      43         71       .606         66  42-1  123       4.7 


Bob  was  a  four  sport  athlete  in  high  school  and  MVP  in  basketball.  He  was  a 
quarterback  for  his  high  school  football  team.  As  a  freshman  he  scored  249  points  in 
16  games  while  hitting  an  excellent  66  percent  of  his  shots.  As  a  part  time  starter  for 
the  varsity  last  year  he  scored  123  points,  played  in  all  26  games  and  hit  48  percent  of 
his  shots.  He  is  an  excellent  defensive  player  and  it  was  his  steal  in  the  South  Carolina 
game  that  set  up  the  winning  shot  by  Jim  O'Brien.  He  scored  his  high  of  10  points  last 
year  against  Miami  and  North  Carolina  State.  He  is  an  excellent  ball  handler  and 
aggressive  player.  As  a  freshman  he  hit  11  of  13  shots  against  Kings  College  as  the 
freshmen  scored  a  record  141  points.  He  had  a  15.6  average  for  the  freshmen.  He  had 
the  fourth  highest  assist  total  for  the  varsity  last  year  with  52,  only  three  behind 
Howard  White's  55. 


17 


41 
LEN   ELMORE 

6-9,  230,  19,  Sophomore 
Springfield  Gardens,  New  York 

REACH:    107  inches 


Freshman 


GAMES      FGM      FGA     PCT      FTM      FTA     PCT      REBS     PF-DSQ     PTS     AVG 

5  22  39     .564       11  16       .688        47  12-0  55      11.0 


Len  could  be  the  key  to  the  Terps  success  this  year.  He  is  the  type  big  man  needed 
to  make  Coach  Lefty  Driesell's  offense  go.  He  is  an  excellent  rebounder  and  defensive 
player  and  can  score.  He  was  selected  as  one  of  the  "Ten  Top  High  School  Scholar- 
Athletes"  in  America  by  Coach  and  Athlete  Magazine  while  in  high  school,  where  he 
played  for  Mr.  Jack  Kuhnert.  He  is  a  member  of  the  National  Honor  Society  and 
qualified  for  New  York  State  Regents  Scholarship  and  National  Merit  Scholarship 
while  in  high.  He  works  with  the  Police  Athletic  League  with  underprivileged  youth 
during  the  summer.  He  was  second  only  to  Lou  Alcindor  as  a  rebounder  at  Power 
Memorial  High.  Has  never  played  on  a  losing  team.  Was  in  only  five  games  for  the 
freshman  suffering  a  broken  ankle  prior  to  the  season  and  then  a  fractured  kneecap 
against  Georgetown  in  the  sixth  game  of  the  season.  Had  20  points  and  17  rebounds 
against  George  Washington  Freshmen.  He  was  the  MVP  in  high  school  all-star  game  in 
Allentown,  Pennsylvania.  A  Pre-Law  major. 


18 


44 

JIM   O'BRIEN 

6-7,  180,  20,  Junior 
Falls  Church,  Virginia 

REACH:    102  inches 


1970-1971 

23 

14 

9 

22 

25 

24 

24 

X 
14 
21 


X 

X 

8 

22 


15 

20 

12 
13 
X 
15 
13 

9 
15 
16 


Buffalo 

Clemson 

Delaware 

Duke 

Georgetown 

George  Washington 

Lehigh 

Loyola 

Miami  (Fla.) 

North  Carolina 

N.  C.  State 

Richmond 

Seton  Hall 

South  Carolina 

Tampa 

Virginia 

Wake  Forest 

West  Virginia 


GAMES      FGM      FGA      PCT      FTM      FTA      PCT      REBS      PF  DSQ     PTS      AVG 

Freshman  16  182         378      .481     117       142       .824       262  59-2         481      30.1 

Sophomore  21  104         252      .413     134       171       .784       164  77-3         342      16.3 


Jim  was  a  high  school  Ail-American  at  Jeb  Stuart  high  school  in  nearby  Virginia.  He 
led  the  freshman  team  in  everything  and  led  the  varsity  in  scoring  and  assists  last  year. 
His  16.3  average  for  21  games  was  based  on  342  points  and  134  of  171  free  throws.  He 
led  the  team  with  70  assists  and  contributed  the  final  and  winning  shot  in  several  games 
with  the  most  notable  being  the  South  Carolina  upset.  He  was  hospitalized  for  five 
games  with  a  bleeding  ulcer  but  returned  for  the  North  Carolina  State  game.  After  only 
four  days  practice  he  played  against  State  and  scored  2 1  points  in  the  23  minutes  he 
played  as  Maryland  lost  81-83.  His  high  game  was  25  against  Duke  in  a  88-79  win.  As  a 
freshman  his  31.4  average  was  the  second  best  ever  and  his  182  field  goals  set  a 
freshman  record.  His  freshman  high  was  40  points  against  George  Washington.  He 
scored  over  20  points  in  14  of  his  16  freshman  games  and  was  in  double  figures  for  17 
of  his  21  varsity  games.  Although  6-7  he  can  help  bring  the  ball  up  court  and  is  an 
excellent  ball  handler. 


19 


53 
CHARLIE   BLANK 

6-8,  208,  21,  Senior 
Runnemede,  New  Jersey 


REACH:    104  inches 


1969-1970 

1970-1971 

2 

Army 

14 

16 

Buffalo 

13 

18 

13 

0 

Clemson 

10 

13 

Delaware 

6 

3 

11 

6 

Duke 

2 

Fordham 

13 

7 

Georgetown 

11 

16 
8 

9 
15 

5 
9 

George  Washington 

Lehigh 

Loyola 

Maine 

Miami  (Fla.) 
Navy 

10 

6 

6 

2 

North  Carolina 

0 

10 

0    12 

8 

N.C.  State 

10 

8 
X 

Princeton 
Richmond 
Seton  Hall 

4 

0 

8 
9 

0         C 

South  Carolina 
Tampa 

11 

2 

12 

8 

Virginia 

21 

14 

8 

10 

Wake  Forest 

13 

5 

2 

West  Virginia 

GAMES 

Freshman 

16 

Sophomore 

26 

Junior 

25 

FGM  FGA  PCT  FTM  FTA     PCT  REBS  PF-DSQ  PTS     AVG 

137  283  .484  41  58      .707  174  36  315  19.7 

98  204  .480  26  41       .634  127  55-3  222        8.5 

80  169  .473  37  53      .698  103  67.1  197        7.9 


Charlie  is  the  only  senior  on  the  team.  As  a  junior  he  started  most  of  the  season  and 
was  in  25  of  26  games,  scoring  197  points  with  103  rebounds.  As  a  sophomore  he 
recorded  222  points  with  127  rebounds,  in  26  games.  His  top  scoring  game  last  year 
was  16  against  Buffalo.  He  led  the  freshman  team  in  scoring  two  years  ago  with  a  19.7 
average  and  3 1 5  points.  He  has  missed  only  one  game  in  three  years  and  has  played 
outside  most  of  the  time.  His  top  games  as  a  sophomore  included  21  points  against 
Wake  Forest  and  18  against  Clemson.  His  freshman  high  was  30  against  Bainbridge 
Prep.  As  a  freshman  he  hit  10  of  12  shots  from  the  floor  against  Brandy  wine  Junior 
College.  He  was  All-State  in  football  as  an  end  and  baseball  as  a  pitcher  at  St.  Joe's  high 
in  Camden,  New  Jersey.  He  achieved  All-South  Jersey  honors  in  basketball  in  high.  He 
pitched  a  no-hitter  in  an  All-Star  game  in  high  and  Captained  all  three  sports  in  high 
school. 


20 


54 

TOM   McMILLEN 

6-11,  210,  19,  Sophomore 
Mansfield,  Pennsylvania 

REACH:    110inches 


GAMES      FGM      FGA      PCT      FTM      FTA      PCT      REBS      PF-DSQ      PTS      AVG 

Freshman       16     178    285  .625  113   125   .904   247     48-2    468  29.3 


Tom  is  the  most  talented  basketball  player  to  ever  enroll  at  Maryland.  He  has  been 
accorded  Ail-American  honors  by  nearly  all  of  the  pre-season  publications.  He  led  the 
freshman  team  to  an  undefeated  season  and  NUMBER  ONE  ranking  with  a  29.3 
scoring  average  and  468  points  in  1 6  games.  He  hit  63  percent  of  his  shots  from  the 
field  and  90  percent  from  the  free  throw  line.  He  also  led  the  team  with  247  rebounds. 
His  48  points  against  Georgetown  tied  the  COLE  FIELD  HOUSE  RECORD,  and  his  31 
rebounds  against  West  Virginia  were  the  most  ever  by  a  Maryland  player.  He  scored  25 
in  his  first  collegiate  game  and  1 8  in  the  second  game,  his  season  low.  He  is  a  member 
of  the  President's  Council  on  Physical  Fitness  and  Sports,  a  15  member  council  ap- 
pointed by  President  Nixon.  The  Ail-Time  scorer  in  the  history  of  Pennsylvania  high 
school  basketball  and  the  first  high  school  player  to  have  his  jersey  retired  to  the 
basketball  hall  of  fame.  Named  National  Scholar  Athlete  by  National  Education  Asso- 
ciation while  in  high.  Received  only  one  "B"  in  four  years  of  High  and  only  one  in  his 
first  year  at  Maryland  as  a  Pre-Med  major.  His  brother  Jay  was  a  star  for  the  Terps 
1964-67  scoring  1300  points  to  rank  third  in  Terp  basketball  history. 


21 


RADIO-TV  NETWORK 


Maryland's  Terrapins  will  be  seen  on  national  television  three  times  during  the  1971-72  regular  season.  The  Terps  will  host 
two  national  TV  contests,  Feb.  16  versus  North  Carolina  and  Feb.  19  vs.  Clemson.  North  Carolina  will  entertain  Maryland  in 
another  national  TV  fray  on  Jan.  29  at  Chapel  Hill. 

Two  of  the  nation's  largest  markets,  Washington  and  Baltimore,  will  carry  home  telecasts  of  Maryland  games  this  season. 
Washington's  WMAL-TV  will  carry  at  least  eight  of  the  Terp's  games  this  year,  while  WJZ-TV  of  Baltimore  will  air  four 
Maryland  games. 

The  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  TV  package  will  see  Maryland  in  action  for  four  games:  Jan.  8  at  Clemson,  Feb.  5  at  home 
versus  Duke,  Feb.  16  at  North  Carolina,  and  Feb.  26  at  Duke. 


The  1971-72  Maryland  Basketball 
Network  -  RADIO 


CITY 

STATION 

Baltimore,  Md. 

WFBR 

Hagerstown,  Md. 

WARK 

Salisbury,  Md. 

WBOC,  WBOC-FM 

Manassas,  Va. 

WPRW 

Fredericksburg,  Va. 

WFVA,  WFVA-FM 

Norfolk/Hampton,  Va. 

WVEC,  WVEC-FM 

Cumberland,  Md. 

WCUM,  WCUM-FM 

Berkeley  Springs,  W.Va. 

WCST,  WCST-FM 

York,  Pa. 

WORK 

Aberdeen,  Md. 

WAMD 

Annapolis,  Md. 

WNAV,  WNAV-FM 

Cambridge,  Md. 

WCEM 

Winchester,  Va. 

WHPL-WEFC-FM 

Hanover,  Pa. 

WHVR 

Williamsport,  Pa. 

WMPT 

Harrisburg,  Pa. 

WHP 

La  Plata,  Md. 

WSMD 

Lexington  Park,  Md. 

WPTX 

Frederick,  Md. 

WFRE,  WFMD 

Easton,  Md. 

WEMD 

Front  Royal,  Va. 

WFTR 

Oakland,  Md. 

WMSG 

Chestertown,  Md. 

WCTR 

Warrenton,  Va. 

WEER 

WJZ-TV  (Baltimore)  Schedule 

Dec.  17    Canisius 

Jan.  5    N.C.  State 

Feb.  9 Duquesne 

March  4 Virginia 


WMAL-TV  HOME  SCHEDULE 
1971-72  BASKETBALL 

December  1 Brown 

December  13 Georgetown 

January  5 N.C.  State 

February  9 Duquesne 

February  16     North  Carolina 

February  19     Clemson 

March  1 Wake  Forest 

March  4 Virginia 


Follow  the  Terps 
on  the  Maryland  Basketball  Network 

All  University  of  Maryland  Basketball  games 
will  be  carried  by  the  Maryland  Basketball  Net- 
work. WMAL  Radio  63  will  originate  the  broad- 
casts with  Mai  Campbell  handling  the  play-by-play. 
Steve  Gilmartin  will  join  Mai  when  not  handling 
the  WMAL  Telecasts. 


22 


TERP  OPPONENTS 

Brown 

Buffalo 

Canisius 

Clemson 

Duke 

Duquesne 

George  Washington 

Georgetown 

Harvard 

Holy  Cross 

Long  Island  Univ. 

Loyola 

Navy 

North  Carolina 

North  Carolina  State 

Richmond 

St.  John's 

Virginia 

Wake  Forest 

Western  Kentucky 


BROWN  UNIVERSITY 
Dec.  1  -  Cole  Field  House,  8:00  P.M. 

COACH:   J.  Gerald  Alaimo  (Brown '58) 

Won  16  Lost  35 
CONFERENCE:   Ivy  League 

ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Ferdinand  A.  "Andy"  Geigcr 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Joseph  White 

Ofice         (401)  863-2219 
(401)  863-2210 
NICKNAME:   Bruins 
COLORS:   Seal  Brown  and  Cardinal 
ENROLLMENT:    3,900 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Arnie  Berman  6-7,  Bill  KoUcmeyer  6-7,  Bob 

Hansen  6-3,  Alan  Gallotta  6-1,  Craig  Tillery  6-5,  Jim  Cahill  6-1, 

Roy  Stiff  6-9. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   Rusty  Tyler  6-3,  Bob  Pratt  6-7. 
TOP   NEWCOMERS:   Eric  Blackwell  6-6,  Rich  Cureton  6-7,  Jim 

Burke  5-8,  Mark  Flynn  6-4,  Lee  O'Connor  6-3. 


1970-71  Results 

Rhode  Island       94 

Providence     91 

Boston  Univ 72 

Yale 72 

Clark     81 

Yale 66 

American 69 

Vermont     72 

George  Washington      ...  70 

Georgetown      80 

Cornell      68 

Columbia 79 

Providence     78 

Northeastern 72 

Dartmouth     74 

Harvard 95 

Pennsylvania    70 

Princeton 74 

Columbia 68 

Cornell      62 

Pennsylvania    96 

Princeton 72 

Harvard 65 

Dartmouth     98 

Rhode  Island       78 


Brown  Schedule 

December 

88 

1-at  Maryland 

63 

4— at  Providence 

69 

8- Yale 

78 

11 -at  Rhode  Island 

90 

15-at  Yale 

79 

20-at  Ohio  State 

83 

22-at  Xavier 

83 

28-30-Hall  of  Fame  Tourn. 

72 

January 

76 

7— Columbia 

81 

8-Cornell 

74 

14— George  Washington 

76 

29— at  Furman 

71 

February 

75 

4— at  Cornell 

80 

5— at  Columbia 

56 

1 1— Dartmouth 

56 

12- Harvard 

65 

18— at  Pennsylvania 

75 

19— at  Princeton 

82 

25-at  Harvard 

52 

26— at  Dartmouth 

60 

March 

91 

3— Princeton 

95 

4— Pennsylvania 

7— Rhode  Island 

9— Providence 

J.  Gerald  Alaimo 


Arnie  Berman 


23 


STATE  UNIVERSITY  OF  NEW  YORK 
(BUFFALO) 

Jan.  25  -  Cole  Field  House,  8:30  P.M. 

COACH:   Edwin  D.  Muto  (Buffalo  '50) 

Won  9  Lost  13 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  9   Lost  13 
CONFERENCE:   Independent 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Dr.  Harry  G.  Fritz 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Dick  Baldwin 

Office        (716)  831-2935 

Home        (716)  632-7227 
NICKNAME:   Bulls 
COLOR:  Buffalo  Blue 
ENROLLMENT:    12,000 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Rick  Matanle  6-4,  Neil  Langelier  6-4,  Eric 

Rasmussen  6-5,  Curt  Blackmore  6-6,  Bill  Stark  6-9,  Al  Delman 

6-0,  Tim  Lennon  5-10. 
LETTERMEN   LOST:  Tony   Ebner   6-7,   Phil  Knapp  6-2,   Roger 

Kremblas  6-2. 
TOP    NEWCOMERS:   Jim    Tribble    6-6,    Greg    Laker    6-6,    Bob 

Vartanian  6-2,  Joe  Evans  6-4. 


Buffalo  Schedule 

December  70 

1— at  Syracuse  70 

3-at  Point  Park  46 

7-Toronto  106 

1 1 —at  Central  Michigan  80 

14-Ohio  Northern  71 

17-Northeastern  61 

18— Illinois  State  81 

27— at  Georgia  Southern  76 

28-at  Georgia  State  66 

30-at  Samford  72 

January  61 

19-at  Akron  77 

22-LeMoyne  86 

25-at  Maryland  86 

29-Cornell  101 

31 —Northern  Illinois  84 

February  85 

2-at  Army  96 

5— at  Niagara  76 

8— Eastern  Michigan  87 

1 1-at  Brockport  State  59 

17— at  Stony  Brook 

19-at  Rochester 

26-Albany 

29— Merrimack 

March 

6— at  Buffalo  State 


1970-71  Results 

Syracuse      80 

Maryland    109 

UNC-Charlotte       64 

Toronto      56 

Central  Michigan      ....  73 
Northern  Illinois       ....  77 

Northeastern 80 

Dickinson       60 

Eastern  Michigan      ....  88 

Akron       71 

LeMoyne 80 

Albany     76 

Niagara     90 

Point  Park     69 

Rochester      72 

Wayne  State     83 

Ithaca 68 

Buffalo  State       87 

Stony  Brook     62 

Ball  State 87 

Brockport  State     86 

Cincinnati      86 


CANISIUS  COLLEGE 

Dec.  17  -  Cole  Field  House,  8:00  P.M. 

COACH:   Robert  A.  MacKinnon  (Canisius  '50) 

Won  126  Lost  149 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  8  Lost  13 
CONFERENCE:   Little  Three 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Robert  A.  MacKinnon 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Gene  Krzyzynski 

Office        (716)  883-8203 
NICKNAME:  Golden  Griffins 
COLORS:   Blue  and  Gold 
ENROLLMENT:   2,000 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Mike  Macaluso  6-5,  Clyde  Alexander  6-6, 

Gary  Lawrence  6-7,  Mike  Norwood  6-2,  Arron  Covington  6-2. 
LETTERMEN   LOST:   BUI  DeMarrs  6-2,  Kevin  Spither  6-5,  Tim 

Richardson  6-4. 
TOP  NEWCOMER:  Gary  Stewart  6-5. 


Canisius  Schedule 

1— at  Wake  Forest  88 

4-Cleveland  State  64 

9-at  Boston  College  91 

11-Catholic  74 

17— at  Maryland  83 

18-Wayne  State  55 

22-at  Scranton  63 

30— Queen  City  Tourn.  62 

January  58 

1— Queen  City  Tourn.  76 

4— at  Richmond  92 

8— Villanova  65 

12— at  Syracuse  71 

15- Niagara  86 

19-at  Duke  55 

22— St.  Bonaventure  75 

29-LaSalle  70 

February  59 

2-at  Colgate  98 

5— Manhattan  68 

8-at  Providence  69 
12-St.  Peter's 
16-at  St.  Francis  (Pa.) 
19— Baltimore 
23— at  St.  Bonaventure 
26-Fairfield 
March 

4— Niagara 
6— at  Xavier 


1970-71  Results 

Scranton 73 

Syracuse      76 

Baltimore      81 

Drake 87 

Morehead  State     74 

Niagara     61 

at  Fairfield 65 

St.  Francis  (Pa.)     72 

Boston  College       67 

at  St.  Bonaventure      ...  79 

Providence     70 

at  Detroit       64 

Manhattan     76 

at  Wayne  State       73 

LaSalle  (Palestra)      ....  92 

Rhode  Island       69 

at  Catholic  U       76 

Villanova  (Palestra)     ...  82 

Xavier       87 

St.  Bonaventure     94 

Niagara  (ot)      85 


Edwin  D.  Muto 


Neil  Langelier 


Robert  MacKinnon 


Mike  MacAluso 


24 


CLEMSON  UNIVERSITY 


DUKE  UNIVERSITY 


Jan.  8  -  Clemson  S.C.,  2:00  P.M. 
Feb.  19  -  Cole  Field  House,  3:30  P.M. 

COACH:  Tates  Locke  (Ohio  Wesleyan  '59) 

Won  9  Lost  17 
1970-71  RECORD:   Won  9   Lost  17 
CONFERENCE:   Atlantic  Coast 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   BUI  McLellan 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Bob  Bradley 

Office        (803)  654^111 

Home        (803)  654-5419 
NICKNAME:   Tigers 
COLORS:   Purple  and  Orange 
ENROLLMENT:   8,000 
LETTERMEN   BACK:   Dave  Angel  6-11,  Bo  Hawkins  5-10,  Bud 

Martin  6- 1 ,  J  ohn  Williams  6-11. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   John  Coakley  6-2,  Dickie  Foster  6-6,  Jack 

Ross  6-6,  Dave  Thomas  6-1,  Pete  Weddell  6-6. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:   Anthony  Brown  6-2,  Mike  Browning  6-7,  Mel 

Francisco  6-7,  Dennis  Odle  6-5,  Terrell  Suit  6-0. 


Clemson  Schedule 


December 

67 

4-Davidson  at  Charlotte 

61 

11 -Purdue 

61 

18— at  Indiana  State 

67 

21— at  Cincinnati 

53 

29-30-Poinsettia  Classic 

55 

January 

56 

5— at  Georgia  Tech 

52 

8— Maryland 

72 

12— North  Carolina 

56 

15-at  Duke 

59 

17-at  N.C.  State 

64 

19— Furman 

66 

22— Virginia  Tech 

45 

29— Georgia  Tech 

91 

31— Virginia 

61 

February 

44 

2— at  Virginia  Tech 

77 

5— South  Carolina 

57 

11 -North  Carolina 

48 

at  Charlotte 

57 

12-N.C.  State  at  Charlotte 

56 

16— at  Wake  Forest 

51 

19— at  Maryland 

54 

21— at  Virginia 

60 

26-Wake  Forest 

41 

March 

1-Duke 

4— at  South  Carolina 

1970-71  Results 

Furman 54 

Mercer      46 

Vanderbilt     75 

Southern  Methodist    ...  51 

South  Carolina       81 

Georgia  Tech       72 

Virginia 66 

Maryland     56 

North  Carolina       92 

Duke     82 

N.C.  State      50 

Georgia  Tech       74 

Virginia  Tech       76 

Virginia 44 

Indiana  State       87 

Furman 77 

South  Carolina       47 

Rollins      52 

N.C.  State      64 

North  Carolina       86 

Wake  Forest     74 

Virginia  Tech       53 

Maryland 45 

Wake  Forest     64 

Duke      70 

North  Carolina       76 


Feb.  5  -  Cole  Field  House,  2:00  P.M. 
Feb.  26  -  Durham,  N.C,  2:00  P.M. 

COACH:   Bucky  Waters  (N.C.  State  '58) 

Won  37  Lost  19 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  20  Lost  10 
CONFERENCE:   Atlantic  Coast 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   E.  M.  (Eddie)  Cameron 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Richard  Giannini 

Office        (919)  684-2633 

Home        (919)   383-2258 
NICKNAME:   Blue  Devils 
COLORS:   Royal  Blue  and  White 
ENROLLMENT:   8,000 
LETTERMEN   BACK:    Richie  O'Connor  6-3,  Stu  Yarbrough  6-4, 

Alan   Shaw   6-9,   Jeff  Dawson   6-1,   Pat   Doughty   5-10,   Gary 

Melchionni  6-2,  Robby  West  6-2. 
LETTERMEN    LOST:   Randy   Denton   6-10,  Larry  Saunders  6-9, 

Rick  Katherman  6-7,  Dick  DeVenzio  5-10,  Steve  Litz  6-6. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:    Dave   Elmer  6-9,  Chris   Redding   6-8,   Ron 

Righter  6-7,  Jeff  Burdette  5-1 1. 


Duke  Schedule 


December 

79 

1  — Richmond 

70 

4— Virginia 

95 

7— Pennsylvania 

78 

1 1  -East  Carolina 

104 

17-18— Big  Four  Tourn. 

77 

22-Dayton 

81 

27-30-ECAC  Holiday  Festival 

70 

January 

86 

5— Virginia  Tech  at  Charlotte  93 

12-at  N.C.  State 

67 

15— Clemson 

68 

19— Canisius 

74 

22-North  Carolina 

89 

26-Wake  Forest 

82 

February 

82 

5— at  Maryland 

79 

9— at  Wake  Forest 

83 

12-William  &  Mary 

70 

16— Davidson  at  Charlotte 

64 

19— at  Virginia 

101 

23-N.C.  State 

82 

26— Maryland 

89 

March 

70 

1— at  Clemson 

92 

4— at  North  Carolina 

61 

68 

78 

67 

88 

1970-71  Results 

Princeton 75 

Virginia 75 

Michigan      74 

South  Carolina      98 

Virginia  Tech      75 

Wake  Forest     83 

North  Carolina       83 

Dayton     64 

Santa  Clara 80 

Northwestern      87 

Penn  State     56 

Wake  Forest     67 

North  Carolina       79 

N.C.  State      93 

Clemson      56 

South  Carolina       71 

Maryland     88 

Wake  Forest     78 

Maryland 67 

Davidson     55 

Virginia 69 

N.C.  State      78 

Seton  Hall      61 

Clemson      60 

North  Carolina       83 

N.C.  State      68 

Dayton     60 

Tennessee      64 

North  Carolina       73 

St.  Bonaventure     92 


Tates  Locke 


Dave  Angel 


Bucky  Waters 


Richie  O'Connor 


25 


DUQUESNE  UNIVERSITY 


GEORGETOWN  UNIVERSITY 


Feb.  9  -  Cole  Field  House,  8:00  P.M. 


Dec.  13  -  Cole  Field  House,  7:00  P.M. 


COACH:   John  "Red"  Manning  (Duquesne  '51) 

Won  199  Lost  113 
1970-71  RECORD:   Won  21   Lost  4 
CONFERENCE:   Independent 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Clair  N.  Brown 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Robert  J.  Milie 

Office        (412)  434-6565 

Home        (412)   343-1274 
NICKNAME:   Dukes 
COLORS:    Red  and  Blue 
ENROLLMENT:   7,600 
LETTERMEN   BACK:   Mickey  Davis  6-7,   Mike  Barr  6-3,  Darnell 

Roebuck  6-4,  Dave  Roddy  5-10,  Jack  Baran  6-3,  Jack  Wojdowski 

6-5. 
LETTERMEN    LOST:   Jarrett    Durham    6-5,    Barry   Nelson   6-10, 

Garry  Nelson  6-10,  Steve  McHugh  6-0. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:   Lionel  Billingy  6-9,  Dan  Slater  6-4. 


COACH:   John  F.  Magee  (Boston  College  '59) 

Won  65   Lost  56 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  12  Lost  14 
CONFERENCE:   Independent 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Dr.  Robert  H.  Sigholtz 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Keith  Moore 

Office        (202)  625-4182 

Home         (703)  573-7052 
NICKNAME:   Hoyas 
COLORS:   Blue  and  Gray 
ENROLLMENT:   8,050 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Mike  Laughna  6-7,  Mark  Mitchell  6-8,  Tom 

McBride  5-10,  Mark  Edwards  6-5,  Mike  Geoghegan  6-4. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   Don  Weber  5-8,  Art  White  6-5,  Dick  Zeitler 

6-0,  Bob  Hannan  6-3,  Ed  McNamara  6-5,  John  Connors  6-7,  Tim 

Mercier  5-10. 
TOP    NEWCOMERS:   Don   Willis  6-3,  Vince   Fletcher  6-1,  Tom 

Dooley  6-5. 


Duquesne  Schedule 


1970-71  Results 


Georgetown  Schedule 


1970-71  Results 


December 

2— Morehead  State 

6— Nebraska 
10— Iowa 

16- Nevada  (Reno) 
20- Harvard 
23-St.  Peter's 
29-30-Steel  Bowl 
January 

11— Eastern  Michigan 
15— at  St.  Bonaventure 
18-Steubenville 
20-at  Notre  Dame 
22-at  Rhode  Island 
24-Xavier 
27-Boston  College 
29- Army  at  NYC 
February 

7— Murray  State 

9— at  Maryland 
13— American 
16-at  Villanova 
20-LaSalle 
23-at  DePaul 
27— Providence 
March 

1-at  Detroit 

5— St.  Francis 


80  Roanoke  College      ....  73 

92  Baltimore       60 

81  American 70 

62  Western  Kentucky       ...  69 

90  Steubenville      50 

58  Pitt      70 

79  William  &  Mary      54 

84  Xavier       77 

111  St.  Francis     71 

81  Notre  Dame      78 

106  Cleveland  State      60 

89  St.  Bonaventure     68 

90  DePaul      74 

72  Creighton       69 

84  Santa  Clara 73 

90  San  Francisco      77 

87  Villanova    78 

85  Providence     80 

116  Rhode  Island       95 

95  LaSalle     86 

104  St.  Peter's       98 

52  Boston  College       67 

99  Niagara     69 

93  Detroit     73 

65  Penn      70 


December 

62 

4— at  Boston  University 

60 

7-St.  John's 

88 

11-Loyola  (Md.) 

74 

13— at  Maryland 

69 

27-28— Milwaukee  Classic 

96 

January 

88 

6— at  Louisiana  State 

79 

8— at  Texas 

80 

11— at  San  Francisco 

71 

13— at  Pacific 

95 

18— at  Randolph-Macon 

68 

22-at  Seton  Hall 

69 

27-William  &  Mary 

71 

29-Holy  Cross 

78 

February 

98 

1— American 

57 

3— at  Connecticut 

69 

5-Penn  State 

91 

10— Assumption 

53 

12- Rutgers 

67 

14— at  Navy 

75 

16— at  St.  Joseph's 

84 

20-Hofstra 

72 

24-Manhattan  at  MSG 

78 

26— at  Fordham 

68 

29— George  Washington 

March 

4— at  Boston  College 

Rensselaer     52 

St.  Joseph's      72 

William  &  Mary     71 

St.  John's      80 

Navy      76 

Maryland 79 

Wake  Forest     90 

Creighton      80 

Brown      76 

Randolph-Macon      ....  54 

Boston  Univ 78 

Columbia 80 

Seton  Hall     74 

Fairleigh-Dickinson     ...  59 

Fairfield      65 

Connecticut     75 

American 60 

Loyola  (Md.)       75 

NYU       80 

Rutgers 58 

Boston  College      66 

Penn  State     84 

George  Washington     ...  73 

Holy  Cross 109 

Manhattan     86 

Fordham     81 


Red  Manning 


Mickey  Davis 


Mike  Laughna 


26 


THE  GEORGE  WASHINGTON  UNIVERSITY 


HARVARD  UNIVERSITY 


Dec.  4  -  Arlington  Va.,  8:30  P.M. 

COACH:  Carl  Slone  (Richmond  '60) 

Won  11    Lost  14 
1970-71  RECORD:   Won  11    Lost  14 
CONFERENCE:   Independent 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Robert  K.  Faris 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Doug  Gould 

Office        (202)  676-6654 

Home        (301)  593-8786 
NICKNAME:  Colonials 
COLORS:   Buff  and  Blue 
ENROLLMENT:    14,500 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   John  Conrad  6-11,  Mike  Battle  6-7,  Lenny 

Baltimore  6-6,  Tim  Riordan  6-6,  Maurice  Johnson  6-5,  Ronnie 

Nunn  6-3,  Mike  Tallent  6-1,  Randy  Click  6-0. 
LETTERMEN    LOST:   Walt    Szczerbiak    6-6,   Harold    Rhyne   6-3, 

Ralph  Barnett  6-2. 
TOP   NEWCOMERS:   Howard   Mathews   6-8,   Tom   Rosepink  6-3, 

Randy  Smith  6-7,  Tom  Stewart  6-0. 


Dec.  29  -  7:30  P.M.  vs  St.  John's  in  MIT 
Dec.  30  -  Continue  in  MIT 

COACH:   Robert  W.  Harrison  (Michigan  '49) 

Won  30  Lost  47 
1970-71  RECORD:   Won  16   Lost  10 
CONFERENCE:   Ivy  League 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Robert  B.  Watson 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Ron  Cantera 

Office        (617)  495-2206 

Home         (617)   275-0053 
NICKNAME:   Crimson 
COLOR:  Crimson 
ENROLLMENT:   4,834 
LETTERMEN   BACK:   James 

Lang  6-10,  Floyd  Lewis  6 

6-7,  Marshall  Sanders  6-5, 

Jean  Wilkinson  6-0. 
LETTERMAN  LOST:   Dale  Dover 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:   Jim  Fitzsimmons  6-1,  Tony  Jenkins  6-8 

Wolfe  6-2. 


Brown  6-6,   Rod  Foster  6-0,  Fred 

7,  Tom  Mustoe  6-8,  Brian  Newmark 

Kerry  Scanlon  6-1,  Hal  Smith  6-3, 


Ken 


George  Washington  Schedule  1970-71  Results 


December 

90 

4— Maryland 

80 

8— at  Catholic 

85 

11— at  Marshall 

95 

29-30-Garden  State  Classic 

56 

January 

105 

3-at  Pittsburgh 

68 

7-8— Presidential  Classic 

96 

12— at  Virginia 

81 

14— at  Brown 

70 

20-VMI 

76 

22— American 

77 

26-Temple 

67 

29— West  Virginia 

78 

31— Baltimore 

96 

February 

88 

2— at  Navy 

61 

5— Northeastern 

83 

8— at  Long  Island 

68 

12- Army 

95 

15-at  Lehigh 

73 

17— Rochester 

118 

19— at  Cincinnati 

65 

22-East  Carolina 

65 

26— at  Syracuse 

85 

29— at  Georgetown 

Baltimore       82 

East  Carolina       ....  79 
Jacksonville      ....    110 

S.  Mississippi 90 

Northeastern 73 

Catholic       84 

Citadel      73 

Richmond      79 

East  Tennessee       ...  76 

Brown       72 

Pittsburgh      82 

Virginia  Tech       ....  87 

Maryland 69 

VMI 67 

West  Virginia       ...    105 

Navy      87 

Penn  State     94 

Miami  (Fla.)      81 

Army     73 

Cincinnati      89 

Georgetown      84 

Richmond      101 

Massachusetts      ....  70 

American 74 

Marshall       106 


Harvard  Schedule 

December 

2— Beanpot  Tourn. 

4-Seton  Hall  at  MSG 

8— at  Dartmouth 
1 1 -Amherst 

13— Beanpot  Tourn.  Finals 
15— at  Holy  Cross 
1 8—  Massachusetts 
20— at  Duquesne 
27-North  Carolina  at  Charlotte 
29-30— Maryland  Invitational  Tourn.  121 
January 

7— at  Princeton 

8— at  Pennsylvania 
11— at  Brandeis 
18-Dartmouth 
February 

4— Pennsylvania 

5— Princeton 
11 -at  Yale 
12-at  Brown 
18-Cornell 
19— Columbia 
25— Brown 
26-Yale 
March 

1-Oral  Roberts 

3— at  Columbia 

4— at  Cornell 


1970-71  Results 


83 

Boston  Univ.    .  .  . 

69 

89 

Dartmouth     .  .  .  . 

78 

71 

Boston  College 

.  73 

87 

Springfield     .  .  .  . 

7? 

64 

St.  Louis     

R5 

73 

Michigan     

100 

74 

California      .  .  .  . 

77 

76 

Oregon  State    .  .  . 

.  91 

87 

Ohio  State     .  .  .  . 

103 

89 

San  Jose  State     .  . 

.  75 

121 

Washington  (Mo.) 

.  65 

79 

Valparaiso     .  .  .  . 

8? 

62 

Pennsylvania     .  .   . 

.  81 

62 

Princeton 

60 

89 

Navy      

7? 

81 

Dartmouth    .  .  .  . 

75 

115 

Yale 

98 

95 

Brown      

80 

73 

Columbia 

71 

80 

Cornell     

60 

72 

Pennsylvania    .  .  . 

103 

74 

Princeton 

76 

85 

Columbia 

66 

104 

Cornell     

90 

65 

Brown       

60 

93 

Yale 

87 

Carl  Slone 


Mike  Battle 


Robert  Harrison 


Floyd  Lewis 


27 


HOLY  CROSS  UNIVERSITY 


LONG  ISLAND  UNIVERSITY 


December  22  -  Hampton,  Va.  8:00  P.M. 

COACH:   John  P.  Donohue  (Fordham '52) 

Won  91    Lost  55 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  18  Lost  8 
CONFERENCE:   Yankee 

ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:  Vincent  G.  Dougherty 
SPORTS  INFORMATION  DIRECTOR:   Richard  R.  Lewis 

Office        (617)  793-2571 
NICKNAME:  Crusaders 
COLORS:   Royal  Purple 
ENROLLMENT:   2500  men 
LETTERMEN  BACK:  Stan  Grayson  6-4,  Jim  Schnurr  6-6,  Gene 

Doyle  6-8,  Buddy  Venne  6-3,  Bruce  Grentz  5-11. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   Bob  Kissane  6-9,  Jack  Adams  6-0,  Joe  Phelan 

6-5,  Pete  Knapp  6-7,  Don  Sasso  6-8,  Kevin  Stacon  6-4,  John 

Kearney  6-4. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:  Malcolm  Moulton  6-4,  Dave  Mapp  6-0,  Jim 

Maley  6-5,  John  Budris  7-0,  Larry  Haley  6-2. 


Holy  Cross  Schedule 


December 

1-Stonehill 

4— at  Temple 

8— at  Massachusetts 
11 -at  Yale 
15— Harvard 
18— Connecticut 

22— at  Maryland  (Hampton,  Va.) 
29-30-Poinsettia  Classic 
(Greenville,  S.C.) 
January 

5— Syracuse 

8— Fordham 
15— at  Boston  College 
19-Colgate 
22— Assumption 
26— at  Springfield 
29— at  Georgetown 
February 

1 -Boston  U 

5-Seton  Hall 

8- at  Rhode  Island 
12-LaSalle 
15— Dartmouth 
19— at  Providence 
22-at  St.  John's 
26-Boston  College 
March 

4— at  Fairfield 

9— Rutgers  (Madison  Square  Garden) 


98 

138 
59 
92 
93 
80 
74 

103 
84 
94 
87 
78 
75 
74 
72 
81 
58 
88 

110 
81 

103 
75 
82 

109 
59 
74 


1970-71  Results 

Stonehill     76 

St.  Michael's    ....  68 

Seton  Hall      49 

Yale 65 

Mississippi      99 

Iowa  State     64 

St.  John's      75 

St.  Peter's      88 

Cornell     54 

Syracuse     83 

Colgate     64 

Fordham     102 

Boston  College      .   .  73 

Springfield     63 

Assumption      ....  95 

Dartmouth 75 

Massachusetts  ...  60 
Boston  University  .  68 
Rhode  Island       ...  73 

Fairfield      70 

Connecticut     ....  78 

Providence     81 

Catholic  University  .  71 
Georgetown  ....  72 
Boston  College  .  .  69 
St.  Joseph's      ....  89 


Feb.  12  -  Madison  Square  Garden  3:30  P.M. 

COACH :   Roy  Rubin  (Louisville  '51) 

Won  161   Lost  82 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  10  Lost  15 
CONFERENCE:   Independent 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:  Roy  Rubin 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:  Bob  Gesslein 

Office        (212)  834-6090 

Home        (516)  PI  1-5810 
NICKNAME:   Blackbirds 
COLORS:   Blue  and  White 
ENROLLMENT:   7,500 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Barry  Canterna  6-0,  Ben  DeLane  6-3,  Alan 

Gibson  6-2,  Walter  Jones  6-8,  Tony  Keppel  6-3,  Jay  Lieberman 

5-10,  Ron  McDonald  6-2,  Curtis  Smith  6-4,  Harvey  Smith  6-9, 

Ron  Williams  6-6,  Tim  Solomon  6-9. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:  Mooley  Avishar  6-5,  Bob  Ednick  6-4,  Ron 

Zawacki  5-11. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:  Bruce  Finklestein  5-9,  Fred  Gibson  6-5,  Jerry 

Hartz  6-2,  John  O'Reilly  6-4,  Joe  Clarke  6-2,  Richard  Salit  6-0. 


Long  Island  Schedule 

December  81 

1-Bentley  53 

4— Roanoke  64 

9— at  Wagner  62 

1 1  -West  Texas  State  at  MSG        66 

15— King's  College  51 

18-CCNY  73 

22-Seton  Hall  86 

27— Wisconsin-Milwaukee  87 

30-31  -Queen  City  Tourn.  56 

January  60 

1— Queen  City  Tourn.  74 

5— at  Fairleigh  Dickinson  70 

8-at  C.  W.  Post  75 

10-Niagara  73 

24-at  West  Texas  State  1 04 

26-at  Centenary  75 

29-at  Houston  60 

February  56 

2-Hofstra  70 

5-Marshall  at  MSG  61 

8— George  Washington  83 

12-Maryland  at  MSG  63 

15— Northeastern  75 

19-atSt.  Bonaventure  73 

26-St.  Francis 

29-lona 

March 

4— at  Old  Dominion 


1970-71  Results 

Bentley 59 

LaSalle     68 

Bridgeport     54 

Old  Dominion     ....  58 

Niagara     72 

King's 62 

Valparaiso     52 

Colgate     97 

St.  Michael's 81 

FDU      40 

Adelphi 35 

Utah  State     82 

Oregon  State 71 

Washington       98 

Seattle      84 

Wagner     69 

Houston      81 

St.  Bonaventure     ...  64 

Northeastern 61 

Hofstra     71 

Loyola  (III.)      67 

C.  W.  Post      78 

St.  Francis     65 

Seton  Hall      94 

lona 71 


Jack  Donohue 


Buddy  Venne 


Roy  Rubin 


Walter  Jones 


28 


LOYOLA  COLLEGE 


UNITED  STATES  NAVAL  ACADEMY 


Dec.  20  -  Civic  Center,  Baltimore,  8:30  P.M. 

COACH:   Edward  (Nap)  Doherty  (Loyola  '53) 

Won  119  Lost  116 
1970-71  RECORD:   Won  19   Lost  7 
CONFERENCE:   Mason-Dixon 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Emil  G.  Reitz,  Jr. 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR: 

Office 

Home 
NICKNAME:   Greyhounds 
COLORS:   Green  and  Gray 
ENROLLMENT:    1,200 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Mike  Krawczyk  6-8,  Dan  Rendine  6-4,  Ray 

Turchi  5-8,  Ed  Butler  6-3,  Bob  O'Hara  6-6,  Gene  Gwiazdowski 

6-0,  Mike  Kaiser  6-3. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   Bob  Connor  6-3,  Rick  Betz  6-3,  John  Gaare 

6-2,  Jim  McCabe  5-7. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:    Brian  Flanigan  6-3,  Mike  Castillo  6-1. 


Jan.  22  -  Norfolk,  Va.,  8:30  P.M. 

COACH:   David  P.  Smallcy  (U.  S.  Naval  Academy  '57) 

Won  40  Lost  66 
1970-71  RECORD:   Won  12   Lost  12 
CONFERENCE:   Independent 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   J.  O.  Coppedge 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   L.  Budd  Thalman 

Office        (301)  268-6226 

Home        (301)  267-7116 
NICKNAMES:   Navy,  Midshipmen,  Mids 
COLORS:   Navy  Blue  and  Gold 
ENROLLMENT:   4,200 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   John  Caldwell  6-1,  Kerry  Caliman  5-9,  Hal 

Cronauer  5-10,  Bob  Kenney  6-7,  Mike  McCracken  6-5,  Bob  Perry 

6-4,  Skip  Wiegand  6-5. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   Jack  Conrad  6-0,  Mickey  McCarty  6-3. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:   Gary  Carter  6-4,  Charlie  Robinson  6-0,  Dave 

Stone  6-3. 


Loyola  Schedule 


1970-71  Results 


Navy  Schedule 


1970-71  Results 


December  96 

2-4— Metropolitan  Tourn.  86 

8— American  50 

1 1  —at  Georgetown  62 

20— Maryland  at  Baltimore  89 

January  72 

8-Baltimore  83 

12-Scranton  112 

15— at  Providence  83 

17-at  St.  Peter's  56 

19— Washington  72 

21  — Randolph-Macon  69 

24-at  UMBC  75 

29-Washington  and  Lee  78 

February  93 

2— at  Western  Maryland  82 

5-at  Mount  St.  Mary's  75 

8-Catholic  64 

12— Hampden-Sydney  76 

15— at  Towson  State  67 

17— Johns  Hopkins  84 

19-at  Roanoke  60 

21— at  Virginia  Tech  73 

24-at  Johns  Hopkins  81 

26-Mount  St.  Mary's  74 

76 


Seton  Hall      72 

Kings  College      70 

American 79 

St.  Bonaventure     92 

Washington       79 

Mount  St.  Mary's     ....  71 

Scranton     81 

Bryant      72 

St.  Peter's      77 

Johns  Hopkins 41 

Catholic      91 

Maryland 88 

Johns  Hopkins 61 

UMBC      48 

Western  Maryland    ....  88 

Towson  State      70 

Georgetown     69 

Washington  and  Lee  .  .  63 
Hampden-Sydney     ....  84 

Baltimore       73 

Mount  St.  Mary's  ....  83 
Randolph-Macon      ....  72 

Roanoke     72 

Mount  St.  Mary's  ....  65 
Randolph-Macon  ....  59 
Roanoke     68 


December  65 

1— Dickinson  57 

4— at  Pennsylvania  45 

8— Johns  Hopkins  63 

1 1— at  Syracuse  49 

14-Princeton  76 

29-30-Steel  Bowl  69 

January  73 

5— Washington  &  Lee  72 

8-Temple  78 

12-Baltimore  47 

15— Air  Force  50 

19— Haverford  76 

22-Maryland  at  Norfolk,  Va.     72 

29— at  Manhattan  59 

February  85 

2— George  Washington  57 

5— at  West  Virginia  87 

9— at  American  71 

12-Penn  State  65 

14— Georgetown  62 

16— Rochester  83 

26-at  Army  65 

March  50 

1— at  Rutgers 


Dickinson 45 

Temple     64 

Pennsylvania 59 

Virginia 81 

Princeton 52 

Georgetown     69 

Washington       80 

NYU       72 

Citadel      69 

Baylor      76 

Rutgers 60 

Randolph-Macon      ...  51 
Washington  &  Lee    ...  53 

Harvard 89 

Gettysburg 42 

Baltimore      73 

NYU       50 

George  Washington     .  .88 

William  &  Mary 77 

VMI 47 

Penn  State     73 

American 66 

Manhattan     60 

Army     64 


Edward  "Nap"  Doherty 


Ray  Turchi 


Dave  Smalley 


Bob  Kenney 


29 


UNIVERSITY  OF  NORTH  CAROLINA 


NORTH  CAROLINA  STATE  UNIVERSITY 


Jan.  29  -  Chapel  Hill,  N.C.,  2:00  P.M. 
Feb.  16  -  Cole  Field  House,  9:00  P.M. 

COACH:   Dean  Smith  (Kansas '52) 

Won  191   Lost  77 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  26  Lost  6 
CONFERENCE:   Atlantic  Coast 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Homer  Rice 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Jack  Williams 

Office        (919)  933-2123 

Home        (919)  929-5557 
NICKNAME:  Tar  Heels 
COLORS:   Carolina  Blue  and  White 
ENROLLMENT:    18,000 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Dennis  Wuycik  6-5,  Bill  Chamberlain  6-6, 

Steve   Previs  6-2,   George   Karl  6-1,   Kim   Huband  6-4,  Donn 

Johnston  6-8,  Craig  Corson  6-9,  Bill  Chambers  6-4,  John  Austin 

6-1,  John  Cox  6-1. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   Lee  Dedmon  6-10,  Dave  Chadwick  6-7,  Dale 

Gipple  6-1,  Don  Eggleston  6-9,  Richard  Tuttle  6-1. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:   Bobby  Jones  6-8,  John  O'Donnell  6-6,  Ray 

Hite  6-0,  Darrell  Elston  6-3,  Robert  McAdoo  6-1 1. 


Carolina  Schedule 

December 
2- Rice 

4-at  Pittsburgh 

6— at  Princeton 

1 1— Virginia  Tech 

17-18— Big  Four  Tourn. 

27-Harvard  at  Charlotte 
29-30— Sugar  Bowl  Tourn. 
January 

8— Furman 
12— at  Clemson 
15— at  Virginia 
19-Wake  Forest 
22-at  Duke 
29-Maryland 
February 

3— Wake  Forest  at  Greensboro 
7-N.C.  State 
1 1— Clemson  at  Charlotte 
12-Georgia  Tech  at  Charlotte 
16-at  Maryland 
19-Notre  Dame  at  NYC 
23— Georgia  Tech 
26— Virginia 
29-at  N.C.  State 
March 

4-Duke 


1970-71  Results 

109  East  Tennessee      79 

101  William  &  Mary     72 

106  Creighton      86 

80  Virginia 75 

70  N.  C.  State    82 

83  Duke     81 

86  Utah      105 

73  Penn  State     57 

98  Northwestern      74 

101  Tulane      79 

79  South  Carolina      64 

79  Duke     74 

92  Clemson      72 

84  Wake  Forest     96 

105  Maryland 79 

93  Wake  Forest     75 

65  N.  C.  State 63 

87  Georgia  Tech      58 

86  Clemson      48 

100  Maryland 76 

66  South  Carolina      72 

70  Florida  State 61 

75  Virginia 74 

97  N.  C.State    81 

83  Duke     92 

76  Clemson      41 

78  Virginia 68 

51  South  Carolina      52 

90  Massachusetts     49 

86  Providence    79 

73  Duke     67 

84  Georgia  Tech      66 


Jan.  5  -  Cole  Field  House,  8:00  P.M. 
Jan.  31  -  Raleigh,  N.C,  8:00  P.M. 

COACH:   Norman  Sloan  (N.  C.  State '51) 

Won  74  Lost  60 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  13  Lost  14 
CONFERENCE:   Atlantic  Coast 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:  Willis  R.  Casey 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:  Frank  Weedon 

Office        (919)  755-2102 

Home        (919)  828-5070 
NICKNAME:  Wolfpack 
COLORS:   Red  and  White 
ENROLLMENT:    14,000 
LETTERMEN  BACK:  Paul  Coder  6-9,  Bob  Heuts  6-7,  Rick  Holdt 

6-5,  Rennie  Lovisa  6-8. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   Dan  Wells  6-6,  Toug  Tilley  6-7,  Al  Heartley 

6-1,  Joe  Dunning  5-11,  Jim  Risinger  6-2,  Bill  Benson  6-2,  Ed 

Leftwich  6-5. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:  Tommy  Burleson  7-4,  Steve  Nuce  6-8,  Bob 

Larsen  6-3,  Joe  Cafferky  6-2. 


N.  C.  State  Schedule 


December 

104 

1— Atlantic  Christian 

85 

4— Georgia 

78 

6— at  West  Virginia 

94 

10-Purdue 

8? 

1 7-18— Big  Four  Tourn. 

73 

21— Davidson 

77 

28-29-Gator  Bowl  Tourn. 

8? 

January 

83 

5— at  Maryland 

76 

8— Virginia 

93 

12-Duke 

■sn 

17— Clemson 

7S 

22-Pittsburgh 

100 

28-Lehigh 

71 

31— Maryland 

53 

February 

63 

5— at  Virginia 

64 

7— at  North  Carolina 

RR 

1 1  -Georgia  Tech  at  Charlotte 

63 

12— Clemson  at  Charlotte 

85 

19-Wake  Forest 

97 

23-at  Duke 

78 

26— East  Carolina 

68 

29-North  Carolina 

81 

March 

68 

4— at  Wake  Forest 

56 

1970-71  Results 

Atlantic  Christian     ...  74 

Auburn 91 

Georgia 87 

Virginia  Tech      87 

North  Carolina      ....  70 

Wake  Forest     70 

Davidson     64 

Santa  Clara 79 

Maryland 81 

Wake  Forest     83 

Duke     89 

Clemson      59 

Pittsburgh      89 

West  Virginia      98 

Maryland 61 

Virginia 79 

North  Carolina       ....  65 

Clemson      57 

Georgia  Tech       73 

South  Carolina      ....  79 

Wake  Forest     89 

Virginia 77 

Duke     82 

South  Carolina      ....  82 
North  Carolina      ....  97 

Duke     61 

South  Carolina       ....  69 


Dean  Smith 


Steve  Previs 


Norman  Sloan 


Paul  Coder 


30 


UNIVERSITY  OF  RICHMOND 


ST.  JOHN'S  UNIVERSITY 


Feb.  22  -  Cole  Field  House,  8:30  P.M. 

COACH:   Lewis  Mills  (Virginia  Tech  '60) 

Won  80  Lost  123 
1970-71  RECORD:   Won  7  Lost  21 
CONFERENCE:   Southern 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Frank  Jones 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Walt  Drewry 

Office        (703)  282-7668 

Home        (703)  270-3537 
NICKNAME:   Spiders 
COLORS:    Red  and  Blue 
ENROLLMENT:    7,000 
LETTERMEN  BACK:  Mike  Anastasio  6-2,  Roger  Hatcher  6-5,  Ray 

Amann  6-9,  Joe  Dauses  6-8,  John  Welch  6-4. 
LETTERMEN    LOST:   Jim    Hewitt    6-8,    Bart    Eisner  5-11,  Stan 

Ryfinski  6-7,  Phil  Bushkar  6-2. 
TOP   NEWCOMERS:   Bob   Jacobs   6-3,  Jeff  Snider  6-10,  Carlton 

Mack  6-1,  Gus  Collier  6-7,  Don  Winefordner  6-7. 


Richmond  Schedule 


December 

68 

1— at  Duke 

75 

2— Belmont-Abbey 

84 

4— at  Virginia  Tech 

65 

8— East  Tennessee 

69 

11-VMI 

54 

14— Davidson 

71 

20— Va.  Tech  at  Roanoke 

79 

21— Virginia  at  Roanoke 

57 

January 

67 

4— Canisius 

63 

6— at  East  Carolina 

69 

8-William  &  Mary 

67 

13— Furman 

77 

15— at  Davidson 

74 

29— Cincinnati 

58 

February 

71 

1 -The  Citadel 

81 

5— Virginia  Tech 

63 

9— East  Carolina 

106 

12-Rhode  Island 

70 

14— at  Furman 

63 

16-at  The  Citadel 

93 

19-West  Virginia 

101 

22— at  Maryland 

82 

24-at  VMI 

69 

26-at  William  &  Mary 

66 

61 

1970-71  Results 

William  &  Mary     69 

VMI 57 

William  &  Mary     97 

East  Tennessee       69 

Jacksonville      94 

Davidson     67 

Rhode  Island       102 

George  Washington     .  .  .  96 

Virginia  Tech      77 

Maryland 89 

East  Carolina       79 

William  &  Mary     72 

The  Citadel       64 

Furman 101 

Virginia  Tech      73 

Virginia  Tech      89 

Cincinnati      78 

East  Carolina       82 

VMI 73 

Furman 87 

Davidson     80 

The  Citadel       78 

VMI 77 

George  Washington     .  .    118 
William  &  Mary      ....    103 

East  Carolina       67 

William  &  Mary      64 

Furman 68 


Dec.  29  -  7:30  P.M.  vs  Harvard  in  MIT 
Dec.  30  -  Continue  in  MIT 


COACH:   Frank  Mulzoff  (St.  John's  *51) 

Won  18  Lost  9 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  18  Lost  9 
CONFERENCE:   Independent 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:  Walter  T.  McLaughlin 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   BiU  Esposito 

Office        (212)  969-8000  Ext.  365 

Home        (516)  AN  1-1332 
NICKNAME:   Redmen 
COLORS:   Red  and  White 
ENROLLMENT:    12,500 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Mel  Davis  6-7,  Bill  Schaeffer  6-5,  Greg  Cluess 

6-8,  Bill  Phillips  7-0,  Richie  Lyons  6-0,  Pete  La  Mantia  6-3,  Mike 

Keilty  6-4,  Larry  Jenkins  5-11,  Ron  Rutledge  6-5,  Tony  Prince 

6-9. 
LETTERMAN  LOST:   John  DeVasto 
TOP    NEWCOMERS:   BiU    Bo/:eat    6-11,    Kevin    Raftery   6-3,   Ed 

Searcy  6-5. 


St.  John's  Schedule 


1970-71  Results 


December 

83 

American 

75 

4— Vanderbilt 

66 

53 

7— at  Georgetown 

80 

Georgetown      .... 

74 

11-Seton  Hall 

77 

Rhode  Island       .  .  . 

.  71 

14— American 

95 

Southern  Methodist 

.  80 

17-18— Marshall  Invitational  Tourn. 

85 

Vanderbilt     

81 

22-23- Lobo  Invitational  Tourn. 

66 

Boston  College       .  . 

.  69 

29-30— Maryland  Invitational  Tourr 

.  75 

Holy  Cross 

74 

January 

67 

Western  Kentucky 

.  86 

4— Davidson 

80 

Providence     

94 

8— Syracuse 

82 

Hawaii      

76 

15— St.  Francis 

100 

West  Virginia      .  .  . 

.  82 

20-Temple  at  Palestra  (Phila.) 

88 

Seton  Hall      

70 

23-Villanova 

98 

St.  Francis     

57 

26-Hofstra 

54 

Davidson     

56 

29-at  Dartmouth 

66 

Dartmouth 

56 

31-at  Rhode  Island 

82 

Villanova 

99 

February 

63 

Army     

55 

5— Army 

82 

Niagara     

71 

8— at  Notre  Dame 

72 

Fordham     

76 

12— Fordham 

73 

Syracuse     

78 

15— at  Boston  College 

74 

Temple    

64 

19— at  Niagara 

79 

Notre  Dame     .... 

9? 

22-Holy  Cross 

89 

Holy  Cross 

74 

26-St.  Joseph 

79 

Providence     

65 

March 

85 

NYU       

74 

1— at  Providence 

83 

Tennessee      

84 

ftWdW* 


Lewis  Mills 


Mike  Anastasio 


Frank  Mulzoff 


Mel  Davis 


31 


O'Brien 


Bodell 


Harrington 


D.  Brown 


MARYLAND  FRESHMAN  ROSTER 


NO 

NAME 

HGT 

WGT 

REACH 
(inches) 

AGE 

HOMETOWN 

12 

Tom  Fauquier 

6-1 

146 

93 

18 

Bethesda,  Maryland 

14 

Don  White 

6-4 

175 

97 

19 

Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

15 

Vernon  Thomas 

6-1 

155 

93 

18 

Severn,  Md. 

20 

John  Jobe 

6-0 

162 

92 

18 

Newport  News,  Va. 

21 

Bill  Hahn 

5-11 

150 

90 

18 

Mishawaka,  Indiana 

23 

Varick  Cutler 

6-7 

203 

103 

18 

North  Tonawanda,  N.Y 

24 

Rod  Headley 

6-2 

160 

93 

19 

New  York,  New  York 

30 

Joe  Younge 

6-3 

182 

96 

18 

Philadelphia,  Pa. 

32 

Don  Brown 

6-4 

195 

99 

18 

Clarkston,  Michigan 

40 

Mike  Casey 

6-4 

190 

99 

18 

Rockville,  Md. 

42 

Owen  Brown 

6-8 

204 

105 

18 

La  Grange,  III. 

45 

Tom  Roy 

6-9 

210 

104 

18 

South  Windsor,  Conn. 

H.  White 


Neal 


O.  Brown 


D.  White 


Cutler 


32 


7f» 


^ 


I 


\ 


Raveling 


Maloney 


Hahn 


Blank 


MARYLAND  VARSITY  ROSTER 


NO 

NAME 

HGT 

WGT 

REACH 
(inches) 

AGE 

CLASS 

HOMETOWN 

5 

Mark  Cartwright 

7-0 

205 

107 

18 

Soph 

Morton  Grove,  Illinois 

10 

Rich  Porac 

6-0 

175 

90 

19 

Soph 

Monroeville,  Pa. 

13 

Howard  White 

6-1 

165 

94 

21 

Junior 

Hampton,  Virginia 

20 

Jack  Neal 

6-8 

225 

103 

20 

Junior 

San  Diego,  Calif. 

22 

Jap  Trimble 

6-3 

185 

99 

19 

Soph 

New  York,  New  York 

33 

Darrell  Brown 

6-6 

210 

104 

20 

Junior 

Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

35 

Bob  Bodell 

6-4 

180 

99 

21 

Junior 

Frankfort,  Kentucky 

41 

Len  Elmore 

6-9 

230 

107 

19 

Soph 

Springfield  Gardens,  N.Y 

44 

Jim  O'Brien 

6-7 

180 

102 

20 

Junior 

Falls  Church,  Va. 

53 

Charlie  Blank 

6-8 

208 

104 

21 

Senior 

Runnemede,  N.J. 

54 

Tom  McMillen 

6-11 

210 

110 

19 

Soph 

Mansfield,  Pa. 

Porac 


Trimble 


Elmore 


Cartwright 


McMillen 


33 


UNIVERSITY  OF  VIRGINIA 


WAKE  FOREST  UNIVERSITY 


Dec.  8  -  Charlottesville,  Va.,  8:00  P.M. 
Mar.  4  -  Cole  Field  House,  8:30  -  P.M. 

COACH:   William  J.  Gibson  (Penn  State  '52) 

Won  76  Lost  123 
1970-71  RECORD:   Won  15   Lost  11 
CONFERENCE:   Atlantic  Coast 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:  Gene  Corrigan 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Barney  Cooke 

Office        (703)  924-3011 

Home        (703)  293-6791 
NICKNAME:   Cavaliers 
COLORS:   Orange  and  Blue 
ENROLLMENT:    11,300 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Frank  Dewitt  6-5,  Tim  Rash  6-0,  Chip  Miller 

6-1,  Jim  Hobgood  6-4,  Scott  McCandlish  6-10,  Barry  Parkhill 

6-4. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   Bill  Gerry  6-7,  Kevin  Kennelly  6-1,  John  Hill 

6-0. 
TOP  NEWCOMERS:   Bob  McCurdy  6-7,  Bob  McKeag  6-5,  Lanny 

Stahurski  6-10,  Al  Drummond  6-3. 


Jan.  10  -  Greensboro,  N.C.,  8:00  P.M. 
Mar.  1  -  Cole  Field  House,  8:00  P.M. 

COACH:  Jack  McCloskey  (Pennsylvania  '48) 

Won  62  Lost  71 
1970-71  RECORD:  Won  16  Lost  10 
CONFERENCE:   Atlantic  Coast 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   Dr.  Gene  Hooks 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Bobby  Batson 

Office        (919)  725-9711  Ext.  328 

Home        (919)  924-8523 
NICKNAME:   Demon  Deacons 
COLORS:   Old  Gold  and  Black 
ENROLLMENT:   3,225 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Rich  Habegger  6-6,  Bob  Hook  6-6,  Pat  Kelly 

6-9,  John  Lewkowicz  6-1,  John  Orenczak  6-6,  Willie  Griffin  6-3. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:  Charlie  Davis  6-1,  Gilbert  McGregor  6-7,  Neil 

Pastushok  6-4,  Bobby  Rhoads  6-3. 
TOP    NEWCOMERS:   Bobby    Dwyer    6-2,    Jerry    Campbell    6-3, 

Jerome  White  6-2,  Sam  Jackson  6-6. 


Virginia  Schedule 

December  81 

1— at  Washington  and  Lee  68 

4— at  Duke  75 

8-Maryland  81 

11 -Baldwin  Wallace  79 

15-at  William  &  Mary  94 

20-VMI  at  Roanoke  75 

21-Richmond  at  Roanoke  107 

28-29-Palmetto  Classic  74 

January  66 

3-at  Wake  Forest  50 

8-at  N.  C.  State  86 

12-George  Washington  89 

15-North  Carolina  44 

31-at  Clemson  70 

February  92 

5-N.  C.  State  79 

7— Virginia  Tech  78 

9— West  Virginia  at  Charleston      71 

12-Wake  Forest  69 

16-at  Penn  State  77 

19-Duke  74 

21 -Clemson  71 

23-Pittsburgh  84 

26-at  North  Carolina  85 

March  68 

4— at  Maryland 


1970-71  Results 

VMI 52 

Virginia  Tech       ....  59 

Duke     70 

Navy      63 

Boston  College  ...  69 
West  Virginia  ....  91 
North  Carolina  ...  80 
William  &  Mary  ...  86 
Virginia  Tech       ....  93 

Clemson      56 

South  Carolina       ...  49 

Wake  Forest     81 

Georgia  Tech       ....  84 

Clemson      45 

South  Carolina  ...  92 
Washington  and  Lee   .  70 

N.  C.  State     53 

Maryland 63 

Wake  Forest     95 

Duke     101 

N.  C.  State     97 

North  Carolina       ...  75 

Seton  Hall      73 

Maryland 89 

Wake  Forest     84 

North  Carolina       ...  78 


Wake  Forest  Schedule 

December  96 

1— Canisius  71 

4- Rice  59 

8-at  William  &  Mary  71 

17-18— Big  FourTourn.  93 

21-Yale  83 

29-30-Steel  Bowl  70 

January  90 

3— Virginia  78 

5— Florida  Southern  92 

10— Maryland  at  Greensboro  67 

15— at  Virginia  Tech  83 

19-at  North  Carolina  81 

22-South  Florida  96 

26-at  Duke  64 

29— Davidson  75 

February  103 

3— North  Carolina  at  Greensboro     78 

5— Temple  95 

9-Duke  74 

12— at  Virginia  89 

16— Clemson  64 

19-at  N.  C.  State  64 

26-at  Clemson  72 

March  73 

1— at  Maryland  84 

4-N.  C.  State 


1970-71  Results 

Appalachian     ....  66 

Temple     55 

Tennessee      60 

Maryland    72 

William  &  Mary     .  .  70 

Duke     77 

N.  C.  State    73 

Georgetown  ....  88 
Jacksonville  ....  77 
Virginia  Tech      ...  81 

Duke     68 

N.  C.  State 76 

Virginia 86 

North  Carolina       .  .  84 

Davidson     60 

North  Carolina  .  .  93 
Florida  Southern      .  68 

Duke     83 

Virginia 71 

Clemson      57 

N.  C.  State     85 

South  Carolina      .  .  84 

Clemson      54 

Maryland    66 

South  Carolina  .  .  88 
Virginia 85 


William  Gibson 


<.  \r\      A  —   • 


Barry  Parkhil 


Jack  McCloskey 


Rich  Habegger 


34 


WESTERN  KENTUCKY  UNIVERSITY 

Dec.  29  -  First  round  of  MIT  9:30  P.M. 
Dec.  30  -  Continue  in  MIT 

COACH:   Jim  Richards  (Western  Kentucky  '59) 

1st  year  as  head  coach 
1970-71  RECORD:   Won  24   Lost  6 
CONFERENCE  :  Ohio  VaUey 
ATHLETIC  DIRECTOR:   John  Oldham 
SPORTS  INFO.  DIRECTOR:   Ed  Given 

Office        (502)  745-4295 

Home        (502)  842-4661 
NICKNAME:   Hilltoppers 
COLORS:   Red  and  White 
ENROLLMENT:    11,000  (est.) 
LETTERMEN  BACK:   Rex  Bailey  6-2,  Terry  Davis  6-2,  Jerry  Dunn 

6-5,  Steve  Eaton  6-3,  Dennis  Fox  6-0,  Danny  Johnson  6-1,  Ray 

Kleykamp  6-3,  Jerome  Perry  6-4,  Don  Waldron  6-3,  Chuck  Witt 

6-5. 
LETTERMEN  LOST:   Jim  McDaniels  7-0,  Clarence  Glover  6-8,  Jim 

Rose  6-3,  Gary  Sundmacker  6-4. 
TOP   NEWCOMERS:   Ray    Bowerman  6-9,  Granville  Bunton  6-6, 

Dennis  Smith  6-4. 


Western  Kentucky  Schedule 

December 

1— at  Texas  Tech 

2-at  Baylor 

4— Southwestern  Louisiana 

6— Old  Dominion 
1 1  —Virginia  Commonwealth 
16-Butler 

23— Pennsylvania  at  Louisville 
29-30—  Maryland  Invitational  Tourn. 
January 

13-LaSalle 
15— Tennessee  Tech 
1 7— East  Tennessee 
22-at  Morehead  State 
24— at  Eastern  Kentucky 
29— Austin  Peay 
31 -at  Murray  State 
February 

5— at  Middle  Tennessee 

7— Dayton 
12— at  East  Tennessee 
14— at  Tennessee  Tech 
19— Eastern  Kentucky 
21 -Morehead  State 
26— Murray  State 
28-at  Austin  Peay 
March 

4— Middle  Tennessee 


1970-71  Results 

96  Old  Dominion     ....  82 

88  U  C  Davis      65 

96  Va.  Commonwealth  .  71 
69      Duquesne      62 

100      Butler 90 

97  Jacksonville     84 

108      St.  Peter's      97 

86      St.  John's      67 

84  South  Carolina       ...  86 

86  East  Tennessee  ...  83 
95  Tennessee  Tech  ...  82 
83  Eastern  Kentucky    .  .  64 

85  Morehead  State     ...  63 

76  LaSalle     91 

71       Murray  State 73 

117      Austin  Peay      72 

80  Middle  Tennessee     .  .  66 

87  Middle  Tennessee     .  .  73 

60      Dayton    63 

67  Tennessee  Tech     ...  57 

83  East  Tennessee      ...  65 

89  Morehead  State  ...  70 
94  Eastern  Kentucky    .   .  93 

73  Murray  State 59 

94      Austin  Peay      96 

74  Jacksonville     72 

107      Kentucky       83 

81  Ohio  State     78 

89      Villanova 92 

77  Kansas      75 


Jim  Richards 


Jerry  Dunn 


John  W.  "Jack"  Zane  (Maryland  '60) 

Sports  Information  Director 

Assumed  duties  as  SID  in 
August  when  Dan  Daniels  re- 
signed to  devote  full  time  to 
his  duties  with  WRC  Radio 
and  WRC-TV  in  Washington, 
D.C. 

He  received  his  degree  in 
Journalism  in  February  of 
1960  after  serving  as  a  stu- 
dent assistant  to  Joe  Blair 
(now  Public  Relations  Direc- 
tor with  the  Washington  Red- 
skins) for  three  years.  He 
served  as  full  time  assistant  to  Blair  for  two  years  after 
graduation.  While  at  Maryland  he  was  the  first  Executive 
Sports  Editor  of  the  Diamondback  and  SMC  of  Pi  Kappa 
Alpha  fraternity.  Also  member  of  Sigma  Delta  Chi  Jour- 
nalism Fraternity. 

Zane  was  Sports  Information  Director  for  The  George 
Washington  University  for  six  years  and  served  as  president 
of  the  Southern  Conference  SID's  and  on  the  Executive 
Committee  of  the  Southern  Conference  Sportswriters  Asso- 
ciation. 

He  is  a  member  of  CoSida,  the  Football  Writers  and 
Basketball  Writers  of  America,  the  Sports  Reporters  Asso- 
ciation of  Baltimore  and  ACC  Sports  Writers.  He  is  also  a 
member  of  the  Touchdown  Club  of  Washington  and  the 
Maryland  chapter  of  Sigma  Delta  Chi. 

A  graduate  of  Southern  high  at  Lothian  he  is  a  native  of 
Maryland  and  served  four  and  a  half  years  in  the  Navy 
before  enrolling  at  the  University  of  Maryland. 

He  is  married  to  the  former  Judy  Allen  of  Fayetteville, 
West  Virginia,  a  graduate  of  The  George  Washington 
University. 

Russ  Potts  (Maryland  '64) 

Promotions  Director 

Russ  returned  to  the  Uni- 
versity of  Maryland  in  August 
after  serving  as  Sports  Editor 
of  the  Winchester,  Virginia 
Evening  Star  for  six  years. 
While  at  the  University  as  an 
undergraduate  he  served  as 
Sports  Editor  and  Managing 
Editor  of  the  Diamondback 
and  president  of  Sigma  Delta 
Chi  Journalism  fraternity  and 
Phi  Delta  Theta  social  fra- 
ternity. 

Wliile  Sports  Editor  in  Winchester  he  also  had  a  daily 
sports  show  on  WINC  Radio  and  received  six  awards  from 
the  Virginia  Press  Association.  His  coverage  of  high  school 
sports  in  Northern  Virginia  was  especially  outstanding. 

He  also  served  as  Executive  Director  of  the  Shenandoah 
Apple  Blossom  Festival  for  the  past  five  years  and  this  was 
one  of  the  outstanding  promotions  in  the  state  of  Virginia. 

Russ  is  married  to  the  former  Emily  Strite  of  Martins- 
burg,  West  Virginia,  a  graduate  of  Shepherd  College.  They 
have  a  daughtet  Christy  2. 


35 


FUTURE  TERPS 


42 

OWEN   BROWN 

Ht-6'9",  Wt-216 

High  School  Coach-Ron  Nikcevich 
Academic  Major-Pre  Law 

Exceptional  student  .  .  .  An  Illinois  State  Scholar  .  .  .  National 
Merit  Achievement  Scholar  .  .  .  National  Honor  Society  member 
.  .  .  Member  of  Student  Council .  .  .  Member  of  Merit's  Who's  Who 
in  High  School  America  .  .  .  Potential  Rhodes  Scholar  .  .  .  From 
over  250  offers,  he  narrowed  his  choice  to  Yale,  Stanford,  David- 
son, and  Maryland  .  .  .  His  uncle,  Mr.  Owen  Davis,  is  Deputy  Chief 
of  Police  for  the  city  of  Washington,  D.C.  Owen's  mother  is  the 
producer-director  for  Educational  Television  in  the  city  of 
Chicago  .  .  .  Owen  wants  to  be  a  criminal  lawyer  .  .  .  enjoys 
reading  .  .  .  worked  as  a  playground  instructor  during  summer  .  .  .  Consensus  High  School  Ail-American  .  .  . 
All-State  two  years  in  a  row  .  .  .  Captain  of  High  School  team  .  .  .  Played  in  Dapper  Dan  game  .  .  .  Player  of 
the  Year  in  Illinois  .  .  .  All-American  Academic  Cum  Laude  ...  led  team  to  an  amazing  77-1 1  record  and 
one  state  championship  during  three  years  on  varsity  .  .  .  Scored  over  1500  career  points  .  .  .  had  a  single 
game  point  production  of  42  .  .  .  Team's  most  valuable  player  .  .  .  has  unlimited  ability  .  .  .  Exceptional 
quickness  and  speed  .  .  .  Fundamentally  sound  .  .  .  Possesses  rare  ballhandling  ability  for  size  .  .  .  shot 
blocker  .  .  .  leaper  .  .  .  aggressive  rebounder  .  .  .  works  hard  on  defense. 


23 


VARICK  CUTLER 

Ht-6'7",  Wt-200 

High  School  Coach-Ted  Moore 

Academic  Major-Psychology 


President  of  junior  class  .  .  .  Honor  student  .  .  .  Ranked  in  upper 
twenty  percentage  of  class  .  .  .  Wants  to  become  a  criminal  psy- 
chologist .  .  .  High  School  All-American  .  .  .  All-State  two  years  in 
a  row  .  .  .  Averaged  23  points  for  his  career  .  .  .  Scored  over  1200 
points  .  .  .  Had  a  high  game  of  38  points  ...  As  a  senior  he 
averaged  28  points  .  .  .  Over  200  colleges  expressed  interest  in 
him  .  .  .  Fine  jump  shooter  .  .  .  Good  range  .  .  .  Student  of  the 
game  .  .  .  Shot  58%  from  the  field  and  80%  on  foul  line  his  senior 
year  .  .  .  Captain  of  the  team  .  .  .  Enjoys  working  with  people  .  .  .  Has  warm  personality  .  .  .  Good 
leaper  .  .  .  Handles  the  ball  well  .  .  .  good  speed  .  .  .  Received  special  tutoring  from  Ex-Celtic  Sam 
Jones  .  .  .  Fellowship  of  Christian  Athletes  member  .  .  .  Teammates  call  him  "Wolfman"  .  .  .  left  handed. 


36 


21 

BILLY   HAHN 

Ht-5'10",  Wt-145 

High  School  Coach-Jim  Miller 

Academic  Major-English 


President     of    Student    Council  .  .  .  Honor    Student  .  .  .  National 
Honor  Society  .  .  .  Member  of  Fellowship  of  Christian  Athletes.  .  . 
Hoosier  Boys  State  Representative  .  .  .  Junior  class  president  .  .  . 
Member  of  French  Club  .  .  .  Won  third  place  in  the  Indiana  State 
Demonstration    Speech    Contest  .  .  .  Ranked    64    in    a    class    of 
436  .  .  .  Strong  math  student  .  .  .  Hopes  to  teach  and  coach  .  .  . 
Served  as  captain  of  his  team  two  years  .  .  .  Most  valuable  player  as 
a  senior  .  .  .  Holds  record  for  highest  points  in  a  single  game  with 
46  .  .  .  Recorded  15  assists  in  a  single  game  .  .  .  Exceptional  free  throw  shooter  .  .  .  Played  varsity  baseball 
and  ran  cross  country  .  .  .  Extremely  quick  .  .  .  Sound  ballhandler  and  dribbler  .  .  .  Good  court  savvy  .  .  . 
Hits  the  open  man  .  .  .  Plays  hard-nosed  defense  .  .  .  led  his  team  to  a  46-18  record  .  .  .  first  Maryland 
scholarship  player  from  basketball-rich  Indiana  .  .  .  Tough  and  aggressive  player  .  .  .  Vince  Lombardi  is  his 
favorite  person  .  .  .  Helps  parents  run  chicken  farm  during  summer  .  .  .  Has  quick  wit. 


45 

TOM   ROY 

Ht-6'9",Wt-215 

High  School  Coach-Charles  Sharos 

Academic  Major-Business  Administration 


Chosen  High  School  "Player  of  the  Year"  by  PARADE  Magazine 
.  .  .  Consensus  High  School  All- American  .  .  .  All-State  three  yeais 
in  a  row  .  .  .  Voted  on  the  Ail-American  Academic  Cum  Laude 
team  .  .  .  Participated  in  the  Dapper  Dan  All-Star  game  .  .  .  Tom's 
high  school  game  jersey  has  been  retired  to  the  Basketball  Hall  of 
Fame  in  Springfield,  Mass.  .  .  .  Member  of  the  Student  Council 
.  .  .  All-time  greatest  scorer  in  New  England  high  school  basketball 
.  .  .  scored  2501  career  points  for  an  average  of  28  points  per 
game  .  .  .  recorded  60  points  in  one  game  (26  for  28  from  field,  8  for  1  1  from  foul  line)  .  .  .  Scored  over  40 
points  in  a  game  ten  times  .  .  .  Averaged  33  points  per  game  as  a  senior  .  .  .  pulled  down  29  rebounds  in  one 
game  .  .  .  Served  as  team  captain  four  straight  years  ...  A  starter  from  his  frosh  year  on  .  .  .  led  team  to  a 
56-8  record  and  two  state  championships  .  .  .  Plays  game  aggressively  .  .  .  strong  rebounder  .  .  .  good 
jumping  ability  .  .  .  shot  blocker  .  .  .  soft  touch  around  basket  .  .  .  sought  after  by  every  major  college  in 
America  .  .  .  desires  a  career  in  professional  basketball  .  .  .  likes  to  dance  .  .  .  extremely  likeable  person. 


37 


14 


Extremely  coachable  ...  A  leaper 

work  .  .  .  Admires  Julian  Bond,  Georgia  Legislator 

meter  reader. 


DONALD  WHITE 

Ht-6'3",  Wt-175 

High  School  Coach-Bob  Czekaja 
Academic  Major-Sociology 


Voted     Most     Valuable     Player    in     Dapper    Dan    All-Star 
game  .  .  .  Honorable    Mention    High    School    Ail-American  .  .  . 
All-State  .  .  .  Chosen  the  Outstanding  Student-Athlete  at  Penn  Hall 
Academy  .  .  .  Scored   1644  career  points  .  .  .  Averaged  24  points 
per  game  .  .  .  had   a   single   game   production   of  47   points  .  .  . 
Captain  of  the  team  .  .  .  received  numerous  scholarship  offers  .  .  . 
Outstanding  jump   shooter  .  .  .  Good   range;   quick   release  ...  A 
fundamentally     sound    ballhandler  .  .  .  Catlike    quickness  .  .  . 
.  Ranked  seventh  in  his  graduating  class  .  .  .  Plans  a  career  in  social 
Fashion  Conscious  .  .  .  Worked  in  summer  as  a  gas 


MARYLAND  FRESHMAN  RECORDS 


SINGLE  GAME 

MOST  POINTS:  50  by  Tom  Baxley  ag  Bullis  Prep  in  Silver  Spring  Armory  1960-61  (18  FG  -  14/17  FT) 
48  by  Tom  Baxley  ag  Virginia  Freshmen  in  Cole  Field  House  1960-61  (19  FG  -  10/14  FT) 
48  by  Tom  Baxley  ag  Bainbridge  Prep  in  Cole  Field  House  1960-61  (15  FG  -  18/23  FT) 
48  by  Tom  McMillen  ag  Georgetown  in  Cole  Field  House  1970-71  (21FG  -  6/6  FT) 

BEST  SCORING  AVERAGE:   31.4  by  Tom  Baxley  in  1960-61  (16  games) 

MOST  FIELD  GOALS:   21  by  Tom  McMillen  ag  Georgetown  in  1970-71  (21/32) 

MOST  REBOUNDS:   31  by  Tom  McMillen  ag  West  Virginia 

MOST  FREE  THROWS:    18  by  Tom  Baxley  ag  Bainbridge  Prep  1960-61 

MOST  ASSISTS:    19  by  Rich  Porac  ag  Virginia 

MOST  POINTS  BY  TEAM:    141  ag  Kings  College  1969-70(141-79) 


SEASON  RECORDS 

MOST  POINTS:   503  by  Tom  Baxley  in  1960-61  (16  games),  481  by  Jim  O'Brien  in  1969-70  (16  games) 

MOST  FIELD  GOALS:    182  by  Jim  O'Brien  in  1969-70 

MOST  REBOUNDS:   262  by  Jim  O'Brien  in  1969-70  (16  games) 

BEST  REBOUND  AVERAGE:    16.4  by  Jim  O'Brien  in  1969-70  (16  games) 

MOST  ASSISTS:    156  by  Rich  Porac,  1970-71  (16  games) 

MOST  POINTS  BY  TEAM :    1 609  in  1 969-70  ( 1 6  games) 

BEST  SCORING  AVERAGE:    100.6  in  1969-70  (16  games) 


38 


1970-71  VARSITY  BASKETBALL  STATISTICS 
WON  14      LOST  12 


Jim  O'Brien 
Howard  White 
Barry  Yates 
Sparky  Still 
Charlie  Blank 
Bob  Bodell 
Steve  Kebeck 
Darrell  Brown 
Jack  Neal 
Jay  Flowers 
Dick  Stobaugh 

Md.  Totals 
Opponents 


GP 

FGM 

FGA 

PCT 

FTM 

FTA 

PCT 

REBOUNDS 

ASST 

PF-DSQ 

POINTS 

AVG 

21 

104 

252 

.413 

134 

171 

.784 

164  (7.8) 

70 

77-3 

342 

16.3 

25 

157 

363 

.433 

75 

107 

.701 

74 

55 

41-1 

389 

15.6 

26 

141 

318 

.443 

60 

83 

.723 

224  (8.6) 

53 

77-4 

342 

13.2 

26 

91 

194 

.469 

46 

98 

.469 

208  (8.0) 

24 

68-2 

228 

8.7 

25 

80 

169 

.473 

37 

53 

.698 

103 

17 

67-1 

197 

7.9 

26 

40 

83 

.482 

43 

71 

.606 

66 

52 

42-1 

123 

4.7 

22 

47 

116 

.405 

21 

27 

.778 

22 

19 

12-0 

115 

5.2 

18 

29 

61 

.475 

24 

43 

.558 

59 

2 

19-0 

82 

4.6 

18 

30 

58 

.517 

22 

39 

.564 

61 

3 

26-1 

82 

4.6 

12 

9 

24 

.375 

12 

14 

.857 

14 

5 

5-0 

30 

2.5 

8 

7 

12 

.583 

6 

9 

.667 

14 

2 

8-0 

20 

2.5 

Team  145 

26 

735 

1650 

.448 

480 

715 

.671 

1154  (44.4) 

302 

442-13 

1950 

75.0 

26 

743 

1625 

.457 

422 

600 

.703 

1056  (40.6) 

308 

544-24 

1908 

73.4 

Attendance  Summary 


Games 


Total  Att. 


Average 


At  Home      

On  the  Road 

All  Games    

Largest  Crowd:  15,170  ag  South  Carolina  at  Greensboro 
Largest  Home  Crowd:  14,478  ag  Virginia 
Smallest  Crowd:  4,200  at  Georgetown  (Capacity) 


15  180,842  12,056  New  Maryland  Record 

11  92,711  8,428 

26  273,553  10,521  New  Maryland  Record 


VARSITY  -  GAME  BY  GAME  SCORING  -  1970-71 


MD. 

OPPONENT 

86 

Delaware 

109 

Buffalo 

85 

Lehigh 

72 

Wake  Forest 

70 

So.  Carolina 

79 

Georgetown 

80 

Tampa 

111 

Miami  (Fla.) 

99 

Richmond 

81 

N.C.  State 

31 

So.  Carolina  (ot) 

56 

Clemson 

69 

Geo.  Washington 

88 

Loyola  (Md.) 

70 

No.  Carolina 

61 

N.C.  State 

88 

Duke 

63 

Virginia 

67 

Duke 

76 

N.  Carolina 

56 

Seton  Hall 

45 

Clemson  (ot) 

81 

West  Virginia 

66 

Wake  Forest 

89 

Virginia  (ot) 

63 

So.  Carolina 

ATTENDANCE 


73 

W 

Home 

12,800 

70 

W 

Home 

13,221 

66 

W 

Home 

8,885 

71 

W 

Home 

13,445 

96 

L 

Away 

12,585 

96 

L 

Away 

4,200 

72 

W 

Home 

7,325 

77 

W 

Home 

9,873 

67 

w 

Home 

8,921 

83 

L 

Home 

12,221 

30 

w 

Home 

14,312 

52 

w 

Home 

11,219 

67 

w 

Home 

13,682 

69 

w 

Away 

4,210 

105 

L 

Away 

8,600 

71 

L 

Away 

11,100 

79 

w 

Away 

8,800 

78 

L 

Away 

9,273 

70 

L 

Home 

13,238 

100 

L 

Home 

13,521 

55 

W 

Away 

5,273 

51 

L 

Away 

5,300 

83 

L 

Home 

13,701 

72 

L 

Away 

8,200 

84 

W 

Home 

14,478 

71 

L 

Away 

15,170 

Md.  Top  Scorer 

22  O'Brien 

23  O'Brien 

24  O'Brien 
22  O'Brien 
38  White 
33  White 
26  White 
32  Yates 
30  Yates 

21  O'Brien 
13  O'Brien 
15  O'Brien 
24  Brown 
24  White 

24  White 

13  O'Brien  &  Yates 

25  O'Brien 

12  Blank  &  White 

24  O'Brien 

19  Neal  &  Yates 

15  O'Brien  &  Yates 

16  White 

22  Yates 

22  White 
28  Yates 

23  Yates 


Md.  Top  Rebounder 

1/   Still 

17  Still  &  O'Brien 
15  Still 
15  O'Brien 
6  Still  &  Yates 

8  Still 

14  Still 

17  Yates 
12   Yates 

18  Still 
3  Still 

9  Still 

12  O'Brien  &  Yates 

15  Still 

5  Still,  White,  Brown 

11  O'Brien 
10  Yates 

6  Yates 

13  O'Brien 

12  Yates 

12  Neal 
10  Yates 

10  Yates 

11  Yates 

13  Yates 

12  Yates 


39 


1970-71  FRESHMAN  BASKETBALL  STATISTICS 
WON    16        LOST  0 


Tom  McMillen 
Jap  Trimble 
Mark  Cartwright 
Rich  Porac 
Rich  Bautz 
Stan  Swetnam 
Paul  Ahearn 
Harry  McAfee 
Hugh  Curd 
Brian  Dominic 
Tim  Dirks 
Larry  Ellis 
Mike  Lewis 
Len  Elmore*** 

***out  with  knee  injury 

Md  Totals 
Opponents 


GP 

FGM 

FGA 

.PCT 

FTM 

FTA 

.PCT 

REBOUNDS 

ASST 

PF-DSQ 

POINTS 

AVG 

16 

178 

285 

.625 

113 

125 

.904 

247(15.4) 

20 

48-2 

468 

29.3 

16 

140 

267 

.524 

40 

62 

.645 

88(5.5) 

67 

37.0 

320 

20.0 

16 

97 

187 

.519 

57 

77 

.740 

168(10.5) 

17 

33-0 

251 

15.7 

16 

75 

143 

.524 

35 

50 

.700 

22 

156 

25-0 

18b 

11.6 

16 

41 

81 

.506 

37 

44 

.841 

62 

29 

26-0 

119 

7.4 

16 

47 

105 

.448 

15 

16 

.938 

44 

12 

19-0 

111 

6.9 

13 

10 

20 

.500 

5 

10 

.500 

22 

20 

12-0 

25 

1.9 

14 

8 

18 

.444 

3 

5 

.600 

4 

4 

8-0 

19 

1.4 

11 

7 

13 

.538 

5 

8 

.625 

4 

3 

6-0 

19 

1.7 

9 

4 

6 

.667 

3 

5 

.600 

12 

5 

5-0 

11 

1.2 

9 

3 

5 

.600 

2 

6 

.333 

1 

1 

0-0 

8 

0.9 

13 

1 

9 

.111 

1 

4 

.250 

8 

0 

9-0 

3 

0.2 

2 

1 

2 

.500 

0 

0 



2 

0 

1-0 

2 

1.0 

5 

22 

TEAM 

39 
84 

.564 

11 

16 

.688 

47(9.4) 

2 

12-0 

55 

11.0 

16 

635 

1184 

.536 

326 

430 

.758 

813(50.8) 

336 

241-2 

1596 

99.8 

16 

422 

1064 

.397 

210 

304 

.691 

564(35.3) 

175 

321-20 

1054 

65.9 

SEASON  HIGHS 

MOST    POINTS:   48    by    Tom    McMillen    ag    Georgetown    (TIED 

COLE  FIELD  HOUSE  RECORD) 
MOST  REBOUNDS:   31  by  Tom  McMillen  ag  West  Virginia  (NEW 

FRESHMAN    RECORD    AND    ALL    TIME    HIGH    BY    ANY 

MARYLAND  PLAYER) 
MOST  FIELD  GOALS:    21  by  Tom  McMillen  ag  Georgetown  (NEW 

FRESHMAN  RECORD) 
MOST  FREE  THROWS:    13  by  Tom  McMillen  ag  Villanova  and 

Virginia 
MOST  FREE  THROW  ATT:    15  by  Mark  Cartwright  ag  Villanova 
MOST  FIELD  GOAL  ATT:   32      by  Tom  McMillen  ag  Georgetown 
MOST  ASSISTS:    19  by  Rich  Porac  ag  Virginia  (NEW  FRESHMAN 

RECORD) 
BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PCT:   .833  by  Rich  Porac  ag  Richmond  (10  of 

12) 


TEAM  HIGHS 

MOST  REBOUNDS:  84  against  West  Virginia  in  Cole  Field  House 
BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PCT:   .653  ag  Virginia  in  Cole  Field  House 

(47/72) 
BEST  FREE  THROW  PCT:   .938  ag  Villanova  in  Cole  Field  House 

(30/32) 
MOST  POINTS:    1  24  points  against  Virginia  in  Cole  Field  House 


High 

High 

Scorer 

Rebounder 

97 

St.  Peters 

57 

Home 

25 

McMillen 

11 

McMillen 

82 

Baltimore  CC 

54 

Home 

18 

McMillen 

10 

Cartwright 

83 

Lehigh 

75 

Home 

28 

Trimble 

13 

Elmore 

100 

St.  Francis 

80 

Home 

29 

McMillen 

21 

McMillen 

110 

Geo.  Washington 

57 

Away 

31 

McMillen 

17 

Elmore 

107 

Georgetown 

77 

Away 

38 

McMillen 

27 

McMillen 

111 

Richmond 

71 

Home 

26 

Trimble 

22 

McMillen 

96 

Duquesne 

69 

Home 

30 

McMillen 

17 

Swetnam 

106 

Villanova 

66 

Home 

41 

McMillen 

22 

McMillen 

80 

LaSalle 

64 

Home 

27 

McMillen 

11 

McMillen 

120 

Geo.  Washington 

54 

Home 

30 

Trimble 

14 

McMillen 

85 

Virginia 

72 

Away 

25 

McMillen 

12 

McMillen 

106 

Georgetown 

77 

Home 

48 

McMillen 

17 

McMillen. 

68 

Villanova 

53 

Away 

24 

Cartwright  14  Cartwright 

111 

West  Virginia 

62 

Home 

38 

McMillen 

31 

McMillen 

124 

Virginia 

66 

Home 

37 

Trimble 

10 

Cartwright 

THE  UNDEFEATED  TEAM  WAS  ONLY  THE  SECOND  EVER  BY 
MARYLAND  -  The  1929-30  team  Coached  by  the  current  Faculty 
Chairman  of  Athletics  Dr.  Jack  Faber  was  undefeated  as  freshmen. 
Louis  "Bozey"  Berger  the  star  of  that  freshman  team  went  on  to 
twice  win  AU-American  honors  and  was  the  first  AU-American  in 
Basketball  for  the  Terps. 


GAME  BY  GAME  STATISTICS 


St.  Peters  (97-57) 
Baltimore  CC  (82-54) 
Lehigh  (93-75) 
St.  Francis  (100-80) 
Geo.  Washington  (110-57) 
Georgetown  (107-77) 
Richmond  (111-71) 
Duquesne  (96-69) 
Villanova  (106-66) 
LaSalle  (80-64) 
Geo.  Washington  (120-54) 
Virginia  (85-72) 
Georgetown  (106-77) 
Villanova  (68-53) 
West  Virginia  (111-62) 
Virginia  (124-66) 

OPPONENT  SCORE       PTS  (reb)      X  denotes  did  not  get  in  game. 

Elmore  injured  on  first  play  of  Georgetown  game,  (out  tor  rest  of  season  also  missed  first  game  of  season) 


McMillen 

Trimble 

Cartwright 

Porac 

Swetnam 

Bautz 

Ahearn 

McAfee 

Curd 

Ellis 

Elmore 

25(11) 

19(7) 

6(5) 

17(3) 

11(1) 

9(7) 

2(2) 

2(1) 

3(1) 

2(0) 

X 

18(8) 

14(6) 

10(10) 

8(2) 

8(3) 

1(3) 

2(1) 

0(0) 

2(0) 

2(1) 

17(6) 

26(11) 

28(4) 

12(4) 

14(4) 

2(1) 

6(1) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

5(13) 

29(21) 

14(3) 

14(9) 

13(0) 

9(2) 

4(5) 

0(0) 

0(1) 

3(1) 

0(0) 

13(11) 

31(8) 

14(2) 

15(7) 

9(1) 

7(0) 

1(2) 

5(0) 

6(0) 

0(0) 

0(3) 

20(17) 

38(27) 

18(2) 

12(10) 

18(3) 

7(2) 

14(4) 

X 

0(0) 

X 

X 

0(0) 

19(22) 

26(3) 

11(14) 

23(0) 

10(4) 

6(3) 

2(5) 

4(0) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

30(21) 

20(8) 

15(13) 

13(2) 

12(17) 

0(2) 

4(3) 

0(0) 

X 

0(0) 

41(22) 

18(6) 

12(10) 

16(3) 

8(3) 

5(6) 

4(2) 

2(0) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

27(11) 

20(9) 

4(8) 

6(0) 

5(1) 

18(6) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

X 

0(0) 

29(14) 

30(8) 

15(10) 

8(0) 

14(3) 

12(3) 

2(1) 

2(0) 

6(1) 

0(0) 

25(12) 

21(6) 

17(10) 

10(0) 

8(2) 

4(2) 

X 

X 

X 

X 

48(17) 

19(7) 

23(16) 

3(1) 

2(1) 

10(8) 

0(2) 

1(1) 

0(0) 

0(0) 

21(12) 

11(4) 

24(14) 

6(0) 

0(0) 

6(0) 

X 

X 

X 

X 

38(31) 

11(9) 

29(18) 

13(2) 

6(2) 

8(1) 

0(2) 

0(1) 

4(1) 

0(1) 

23(8) 

37(4) 

32(10) 

8(1) 

2(2) 

15(9) 

4(4) 

2(0) 

1(0) 

0(2) 

40 


MARYLAND  BASKETBALL  RECORDS 
AGAINST  ALL  OPPONENTS 


W  L 

Alabama 1  0 

American  University 0  1 

University  of  Arizona 0  1 

Arizona  State  University    1  0 

Army   2  8 

Bainbridge  Naval  Station    0  2 

Baltimore  University    2  0 

Buffalo 2  0 

Catholic 10  6 

Cincinnati 1  1 

Citadel 1  0 

City  College  of  New  York    1  1 

Clemson 34  20 

Columbia   2  0 

Connecticut 0  1 

Davidson    6  3 

Dayton 1  0 

Delaware    2  0 

Dickinson 1  0 

Duke    26  49 

Evansville 1  0 

Florida 0  1 

Fordham    2  2 

Fort  Belvoir 0  1 

Gallaudet 6  1 

Georgetown 28  20 

George  Washington 24  20 

Georgia 1  3 

Hampden-Sydney 2  2 

Johns  Hopkins 18  5 

Houston 1  0 

Indiana 0  3 

Kansas   0  2 

Kansas  State 1  0 

Kentucky 3  4 

Kentucky  Wesleyan    1  0 

Kings  Point 0  1 

Lafayette 1  0 

Lehigh 1  0 

LSU   2  0 

Louisville 0  1 

Loyola  (Md) 1  4 

Loyola  ( Louisiana) 1  0 

Maine 1  0 

Marine  Corps  Institute 1  1 

Marshall    1  2 

Memphis  State   0  2 

Miami  (Fla)    3  3 

Miami  (Ohio)    1  1 

Michigan 1  2 

Michigan  State 0  1 

Minnesota 2  0 


Mississippi    0  1 

Mississippi  Aggies 0  1 

Mississippi  State 0  2 

Montana  State    1  0 

Navy 20  26 

New  Mexico  A&M    0  1 

New  York  University 0  1 

North  Carolina 25  55 

North  Carolina  State    17  40 

Northwestern 0  1 

Ohio  State    1  0 

Ohio  Wesleyan   0  1 

Oklahoma  State 1  0 

Pennsylvania 1  11 

Penn  State    4  5 

Princeton 1  3 

Quantico  Marines 2  2 

Randolph  Macon    2  1 

Rhode  Island    1  0 

Rhode  Island  State 0  1 

Richmond    17  14 

Rutgers 2  2 

St.  Francis  (Pa) 1  0 

St.  Johns  (Md)    9  3 

St.  Johns  (NY) 0  1 

Seton  Hall    1  1 

South  Carolina 29  23 

Southern  Illinois 0  1 

Stevens  I  nstitute 4  1 

Tampa   2  0 

Temple 0  1 

Tennessee 0  2 

Texas  El  Paso 0  1 

Texas  Tech 1  0 

Tulsa 1  0 

U.S.  Merchant  Marine 1  2 

Vanderbilt   1  0 

Virginia    59  31 

Virginia  Military  Institute 40  10 

Virginia  Tech   22  4 

Wake  Forest 15  25 

Washington  &  Lee    26  24 

Washington  College    13  4 

West  Virginia    9  18 

Western  Maryland 12  0 

Wichita 1  0 

William  &  Mary    16  8 

Wisconsin 0  2 

Woodrow  General  Hospital 1  1 

Wyoming    1  0 

Yale 1  0 


, 

All-Time  HIGH  SCORI 

111 

109 

Miami  (Fla) 
Buffalo 

77 
70 

1970-71 
1970-71 

103 
99 

107 
107 
103 

George  Washington 
West  Virginia 
Yale 

81 
92 
80 

1965-66 
1965-66 
1959-60 

99 

97 
97 

ING  GAMES 

Clemson 

85 

1969-70 

South  Carolina 

59 

1957-58 

George  Washington 

96 

1968-69 

Buffalo 

77 

1969-70 

Maine 

68 

1969-70 

41 


UNIVERSITY  OF  MARYLAND  BASKETBALL  RECORDS 


Single  Game  —  Team 

MOST  POINTS:    1 1 1  against  Miami  (Fla.)  (Dec.  1970)  in  Cole  Field 
House 

FEWEST  POINTS:    15  against  Seton  HaU,  Dec.  1941  (15-59) 

MOST  POINTS    BY   OPPONENT:   107   by   North  Carolina,  Feb. 
1969(107-87) 

FEWEST  POINTS  BY  OPPONENT:    12  by  Navy,  1926  (12-21) 

MOST  POINTS  BY  BOTH  TEAMS:    199  by  Maryland  &  West  Vir- 
ginia Feb.  1966  (Md.  107  -  W.Va.  92) 

FEWEST  POINTS  BY  BOTH  TEAMS:   33  by  Maryland  &  Navy, 
1926  (Md.  21  -  Navy  12) 

MOST  FIELD  GOALS:  46  against  Clemson,  Feb.  1970  in  Cole 
Field  House 

FEWEST  FIELD  GOALS:   6  against  Seton  Hall,  Dec.  1941 

FEWEST  FIELD  GOALS  BY  OPPONENTS:   6  by  Navy,  1926 

MOST  FREE  THROWS:   40  against  North  Carolina  in  ACC  Tourna- 
ment final  1958  (52  attempts) 

FEWEST  FREE  THROWS:   2  against  Virginia,  Jan.   1944  (7  at- 
tempts) 

MOST   FREE   THROWS    BY   OPPONENT:   40  by  Clemson,  Jan. 
1968,(53  attempts) 

MOST  FREE  THROW  ATTEMPTS:   57  against  North  Carolina,  Jan. 
1953,  (made  36) 

FEWEST   FREE   THROW   ATTEMPTS:   7   against   Virginia,  Jan. 
1944  (made  2) 

MOST  FREE  THROW  ATTEMPTS  BY  OPPONENT:   51  by  North 
Carolina,  Jan.  1964 

MOST    FIELD   GOAL   ATTEMPTS:   91    against   South  Carolina, 
March  1969  (made  30) 

FEWEST  FIELD  GOAL   ATTEMPTS:   29  against  Virginia,  Feb. 
1960  (made  18) 

MOST  REBOUNDS:  74  against  Penn  State,  Dec.  1964 

MOST  FOULS:   44  against  William  &  Mary,  Feb.  1952 

MOST  FOULS  BY  OPPONENT:   37  by  North  Carolina,  Jan.  1953 

FEWEST  FOULS:   8  against  Clemson,  Feb.  1960 
8  against  George  Washington,  Jan.  1962 
8  against  West  Virginia,  Jan.  1970 
BEST  FREE  THROW  PERCENTAGE:   .926  against  Clemson,  Feb. 
1962(25-27) 

BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PERCENTAGE:   .630  against  West  Virginia, 

Jan.  1967(34-54) 
LARGEST  VICTORY  MARGIN:  40  points  against  Clemson,  Dec. 
1953(81-41) 

40  points  against  South  Carolina,  March  1959  (99-59) 
LARGEST  DEFEAT  MARGIN:  63  points  by  Army,  1944  (85-22) 
MOST  POINTS  IN  ONE  HALF:  63  in  second  half  against  Yale,  Jan. 
1960,  63  in  second  half  against  Miami  (Fla.),  Dec.  1970 

Single  Game-Individual 

MOST  POINTS:   43  by  Al  Bunge  against  Yale,  Jan.  1960  (14  FG  - 
15  FT) 

MOST  FIELD  GOALS:    16  by  Gene  Shue  against  Wash.  &  Lee,  Feb. 
1953(34att.) 

MOST  FREE  THROWS:    16  by  Tom  Young  against  Wake  Forest, 
Dec.  1957  (18att.) 

MOST  REBOUNDS:   24  by  Will  Hetzel  against  West  Virginia,  Feb. 
1969) 

MOST   FREE   THROW   ATTEMPTS:    19   by   Bob  Kessler  against 
Michigan  State,  Dec.  1955  (11) 
19  by  Gene  Shue  against  Wash.  &  Lee,  Feb.  1954  (13) 

MOST  FIELD  GOAL  ATTEMPTS:   34  by  Gene  Shue  against  Wash. 
&  Lee,  Feb.  1953(16) 

MOST  CONSECUTIVE  FREE  THROWS:    14  by  Jerry  Greenspan 
against  Minnesota,  Dec.  1961 

MOST  CONSECUTIVE  FIELD  GOALS:    10  by  Barry  Yates  against 
Miami  (Fla.),  December  1970 

BEST  FREE  THROW  PCT. :    1 ,000  (ONLY  1 0  or  more  listed) 

Jerry  Greenspan  against  Minnesota  1961 14-14 

Lee  Brawley  against  North  Carolina  1951 13-13 

Bill  Stasiulatis  against  Wake  Forest  1961 12-12 

Lee  Brawley  against  North  Carolina  1951 12-12 

Bob  Kessler  against  George  Washington  1956 12-12 

Jerry  Bechtle  against  North  Carolina  1960 10-10 


Tom  Milroy  against  Penn  State  1968 10-10 

BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PCT.  1 ,000  (ONLY  more  than  five  listed) 

Gary  Williams  vs  South  Carolina,  Dec.  1966 8-8 

Jack  Clark  vs  South  Carolina,  Jan.  1964 6-6 

MOST  FREE  THROW  ATTEMPTS  BY  OPPONENT:   21  by  Bernie 
Janiciki  of  Wake  Forest,  1953  (15) 
21  by  Pete  Brennan  of  North  Carolina,  1958  (15) 
MOST  POINTS  AWAY  FROM  HOME:  40  by  Gene  Shue  against 
Wake  Forest,  1953. 

Season  Records  —  Team 

MOST  POINTS:  2049  in  1968-69  (26  games) 

HIGHEST  SCORING  AVERAGE:  78.8  in  1968-69  (2049  points  in 
26  games) 

HIGHEST  OPPONENT  SCORING  AVERAGE:  84.1  in  1968-69 
(2188  points  in  26  games) 

MOST  OPPONENTS  POINTS:  2188  in  1968-69  (26  games) 

MOST  FIELD  GOALS:  782  in  1968-69  (1842  attempts  in  26 
games) 

MOST  FIELD  GOAL  ATTEMPTS:  1842  in  1968-69  (made  782) 

MOST  FREE  THROWS  MADE:  590  in  1957-58  (29  games  858 
attempts) 

MOST  FREE  THROWS  ATTEMPTED:  858  in  1957-58  (made  590 
in  29  games) 

BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PERCENTAGE:  .459  in  1965-66  (1535  at- 
tempts-made 705  in  25  games) 

LOWEST  FIELD  GOAL  PERCENTAGE:  .346  in  1951-52 

BEST  FREE  THROW  PERCENTAGE:  .747  in  1959-60  (534  at- 
tempts-made 399  in  23  games) 

LOWEST  FREE  THROW  PERCENTAGE:  .617  in  1952-53 

HIGHEST  AVERAGE  MARGIN  OVER  OPPONENTS:  11.5  in 
1957-58  (29  games-69.1  to  57.6) 

BEST  REBOUND  PERCENTAGE:  .585  in  1954-55 

BEST  REBOUND  AVERAGE:  49.1  in  1954-55 

MOST  REBOUNDS:  1178  in  1954-55 

MOST  PERSONAL  FOULS:  579  in  1951-52 

FEWEST  PERSONAL  FOULS:  378  in  1966-67 

LARGEST  ATTENDANCE:   221,153  in  1969-70  (26  games) 

LARGEST  ATTENDANCE  AT  HOME:  138,600  in  1969-70  (14 
games) 

Season  Records  —  Individual 

MOST  POINTS:  654  by  Gene  Shue,  1953-54  (30  games) 
MOST  FIELD  GOALS:  237  by  Gene  Shue,  1953-54  (30  games) 
MOST  FREE  THROWS:  180  by  Gene  Shue,  1953-54  (30  games) 
MOST  REBOUNDS:  336  by  Bob  Kessler  1956-57  (24  games) 
BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PCT:  .621  by  Rick  Wise,  1965-66  (25  games, 

140att-made  87) 
BEST  FREE  THROW  PCT:  .873  by  Bob  McDonald  1960-61  (26 

games  69  of  79) 
BEST   SCORING   AVERAGE:   23.3  by  Will  Hetzel   1968-69  (26 

games  605  pts) 
BEST  REBOUNDING  AVERAGE:  14.0  by  Bob  Kessler  1955-56 

(24  games) 
MOST    CONSECUTIVE    FREE    THROWS    MADE:    27    by    Bob 

O'Brien  1956-57 
MOST  CONSECUTIVE  FIELD  GOALS  MADE:    10  by  Barry  Yates, 

1970-71 


CAREER  RECORDS 

MOST   POINTS   SCORED:   1397  by  Gene  Shue  in   1951-54  (75 

games) 
BEST  SCORING  AVERAGE:   18.6  by  Gene  Shue,  in  1951-54  (75 

games  1397  points) 
MOST  FIELD  GOALS:   547  by  Will  Hetzel  in  1967-70  (76  games) 
MOST  FREE  THROWS:   389  by  Gene  Shue,  1951-54  (75  games, 

526  attempts) 
BEST    FIELD    GOAL    PERCENTAGE:   .477    by    Rod    Horst    in 

1967-70  (354  FG-743  FGA) 
BEST  FREE  THROW  PERCENTAGE:   .773  by  Bruce  Kelleher  in 

1959-62  (68  games  198  FTM-256  FTA) 
MOST  REBOUNDS:  849  by  Bob  Kessler  in  1953-56  (78  games) 
MOST    CONSECUTIVE    FREE    THROWS    MADE:   82    by    Bob 

O'Brien  in  1955-56  (last  five  in  opening  game  of  1956  season) 


42 


CAREER  SCORING 


1,397 

Gene  Shue 

(1951-54) 

1,370 

Will  Hetzel 

(1967-70) 

1,300 

Jay  McMillen 

(1964-67) 

1,266 

Bob  Kessler 

(1953-56) 

1,094 

Gary  Ward 

(1963-66) 

987 

Pete  Johnson 

(1966-69) 

972 

Bob  O'Brien 

(1954-57) 

935 

Al  Bunge 

(1957-60) 

875 

Jerry  Greenspan 

(1960-63) 

861 

Nick  Davis 

(1954-57) 

860 

Rod  Horst 

(1967-70) 

854 

Bruce  Kelleher 

(1958-61) 

783 

Charles  McNeil 

(1957-60) 

718 

Rick  Wise 

(1963-66) 

713 

Neil  Bray  ton 

(1963-66) 

SINGLE  SEASON  SCORING 


654 

Gene  Shue 

1953-54 

605 

Will  Hetzel 

1968-69 

512 

Jay  McMillen 

1964-65 

508 

Gene  Shue 

1952-53 

490 

Bob  Kessler 

1955-56 

487 

Bob  Kessler 

1954-55 

469 

Gary  Ward 

1964-65 

430 

Gary  Ward 

1965-66 

428 

Rod  Horst 

1969-70 

414 

Will  Hetzel 

1969-70 

401 

Charles  McNeil 

1958-59 

396 

Jay  McMillen 

1965-66 

392 

Jay  McMillen 

1966-67 

389 

Howard  White 

1970-71 

383 

Al  Bunge 

1959-60 

380 

Jerry  Greenspan 

1961-62 

SINGLE  SEASON  REBOUNDING 


336 

Bob  Kessler 

1955-56 

318 

Will  Hetzel 

1968-69 

289 

Al  Bunge 

1959-60 

279 

Bob  McDonald 

1960-61 

271 

Gary  Ward 

1964-65 

265 

Al  Bunge 

1957-58 

263 

Bob  Kessler 

1954-55 

258 

Rod  Horst 

1969-70 

250 

Bob  Everett 

1954-55 

250 

Bob  Kessler 

1953-54 

241 

Al  Bunge 

1958-59 

241 

Gary  Ward 

1965-66 

235 

Jerry  Greenspan 

1961-62 

229 

Rod  Horst 

1968-69 

220 

Sparky  Still 

1969-70 

229 

Rod  Horst 

1968-69 

224 

Barry  Yates 

1970-71 

220 

Sparky  Still 

1969-70 

208 

Sparky  Still 

1970-71 

202 

Rich  Drescher 

1967-68 

195 

Jim  Halleck 

1956-57 

195 

Jay  McMillen 

1966-67 

191 

Jay  McMillen 

1964-65 

Gene  Shue 


Will  Hetzel 


Jay  McMillen 


43 


MARYLAND  CONFERENCE  TOURNAMENT  RECORDS 


SOUTHERN  CONFERENCE 


ATLANTIC  COAST  CONFERENCE 


1922-23 
1923-24 

Md.      34 
25 
1924-25 

Md.       27 
16 
1925-26 

Md.      19 
1926-27 

Md.      22 
1927-28 

Did  not  enter 
1 928-29 

Md.      35 
1929-30 

Md.      21 
1930-31 

Md.      37 

19 

26 

29 

1931-32 

Md.      24 
1932-33 

Md.      28 
1 933-34 

Md.      37 
1934-35 

Did  not  enter 
1 935-36 

Md.      47 
32 
1936-37 

Md.      35 
1937-38 

Md.      45 
32 
1938-39 

Md.      47 
53 
27 
1939-40 

Md.      43 
32 
194041 

Did  not  enter 
1941-42 

Did  not  enter 
194243 

Did  not  enter 
194344 

Md.      23 
194445 

Md.      49 
1945-46 

Md.      27 
194647 

Md.      43 
194748 

Md.       51 
1948-49 

Md.      61 
1949-50 

Did  not  enter 
1950-51 

Md.      50        Clemson 

45        N.  C.  State 
1951-52 

Md.      48         Duke 
1952-53 

Md.      74         Duke 

59         Wake  Forest 


VMI 
Georgia 

Alabama 
N.  C.  State 

Miss.  Aggies 

Georgia 


Mississippi 
Kentucky 

LSU 

North  Carolina 

Georgia 

Kentucky 

Florida 

South  Carolina 

Washington  &  Lee 


Duke 
Washington  &  Lee 

N.  C.  State 

Citadel 
Duke 

Richmond 
N.  C.State 
Clemson 

Washington  &  Lee 
Duke 


N.  C.State 

Duke 

N.  C.  State 

N.  C.  State 

Davidson 

North  Carolina 


19 
29 

21 
30 

22 

27 


37 

26 

33 
17 
25 
27 

39 

65 

45 


35 
38 

42 

43 
35 

32 
29 
39 

30 
44 


42 
76 
54 
55 
58 
79 


48 
54 


51 


65 
61 


1953-54 

Md. 

75 

Clemson 

56 

Wake  Forest 

1954-55 

Md. 

67 

Virginia 

1955-56 

Md. 

69 

Duke 

1956-57 

Md. 

71 

Virginia 

64 

South  Carolina 

1957-58 

Md. 

70 

Virginia 

71 

Duke 

86 

North  Carolina 

1958-59 

Md. 

65 

Virginia 

1959-60 

Md. 

58 

N.  C.State 

1960-61 

Md. 

91 

Clemson 

76 

Wake  Forest 

59 
64 

68 

94 

68 

74 

66 
65 

74 

66 

74 

75 
98 


1961-62 

Md. 

58 

Duke 

71 

1962-63 

Md. 

41 

Wake  Forest 

80 

1963-64 

Md. 

67 

Clemson 

81 

1964-65 

Md. 

61 

Clemson 

50 

67 

N.  C.  State 

76 

1965-66 

Md. 

70 

North  Carolina 

77 

1966-67 

Md. 

54 

South  Carolina 

57 

1967-68 

Md. 

54 

N.  C.  State 

63 

1968-69 

Md. 

71 

South  Carolina 

92 

1969-70 

Md. 

57 

N.  C.  State 

67 

1970-71 

Md. 

63 

South  Carolina 

71 

INVITATIONAL  TOURNAMENT  RECORDS 


VPI  Invitational  Tournament 
Blacksburg,  Virginia 
59        Tennessee 
75         LSU 
Evansville  Invitational 
54         Arizona 
82        Columbia 
Hurricane  Classic 
Miami,  Florida 
66         Tulsa 
73        Miami  (Fla) 
Sugar  Bowl  Tournament 
New  Orleans,  Louisiana 
69         Houston 
77         Dayton 
Memphis  State  Invitational 
Memphis,  Tennessee 
50        Oklahoma  State 
53         Memphis  State 
Charlotte  Invitational 
Charlotte,  North  Carolina 
66         Davidson 
57         Army 

Sun  Carnival  Tournament 
El  Paso,  Texas 
53        Texas  El  Paso 
72         Southern  Illinois 
Marshall  Invitational 
Huntington,  West  Virginia 
89        Marshall 
85         Miami  (Fla) 
Charlotte  Invitational 
Charlotte,  North  Carolina 
69         Davidson 
95         Wichita 
1970-71 
None 


1 953-54 

All-American  City  Tournament 

1962-63 

Owensboro,  Kentucky 

None 

Md. 

65         Arizona  State 

50 

1 963-64 

Md. 

66        Evansville 

58 

Md. 

54         Kentucky  Wesleyan 

37 

Md. 

1954-55 

All-American  City  Tournament 
Owensboro,  Kentucky 

Md. 

Md. 

58        Texas  Tech 

54 

Md. 

Md. 

83         Rhode  Island 

66 

Md. 

Md. 

78         Cincinnati 

61 

1964-65 

1955-56 

Mid  Winter  Festival 

Md. 

75         Michigan  State 

95 

Md. 

Md. 

75         St.  Francis 

66 

Md. 

1956-57 

All-American  City  Tournament 
Owensboro,  Kentucky 

1965-66 

Md. 

89         Montana  State 

72 

Md. 

Md. 

43         New  Mexico  A  &  M 

45 

Md. 

Md. 

43         Virginia 

39 

1 966-67 

1957-58 

Sugar  Bowl  Tournament 

New  Orleans,  Louisiana 

Md. 

Md. 

71          Vanderbilt 

56 

Md. 

Md. 

46         Memphis  State 

47 

1958-59 

Sugar  Bowl  Tournament 

New  Orleans,  Louisiana 

Md. 

Md. 

45         Miss.  State 

56 

Md. 

Md. 

54         Loyola 

50 

1967-68 

1959-60 

Blue  Grass  Tournament 

Louisville,  Kentucky 

Md. 

Md. 

63        Indiana 

72 

Md. 

Md. 

76         Fordham 

54 

1968-69 

1960-61 

Dixie  Classic 

Raleigh,  North  Carolina 

Md. 

Md. 

57         North  Carolina 

81 

Md. 

Md. 

67         N.  C.State 

75 

Md. 

84         Wyoming 

77 

1961-62 

Sugar  Bowl  Tournament 

Md. 

New  Orleans,  Louisiana 

Md. 

Md. 

62         Miss.  State 

64 

1969-70 

Md. 

64         Louisville 

83 

None 

70 
65 

57 
76 


59 
80 


68 
75 


49 
55 


65 
54 


70 
73 


80 
92 


83 
83 


44 


TEAMS  COACHED  BY  H.  BURTON  SHIPLEY: 


ALL  GAMES 

CONF. 

GAMES 

Won 

Lost 

Won 

Lost 

1923  24 

4 

6 

1 

2 

1924  25 

11 

4 

3 

1 

192526 

14 

2 

7 

1 

1926-27 

10 

9 

6 

4 

192728 

14 

4 

8 

1 

192829 

7 

8 

2 

5 

1929  30 

16 

5 

9 

5 

1930-31 

14 

4 

8 

1 

1931-32 

16 

3 

8 

2 

1932  33 

11 

8 

7 

3 

1933-34 

11 

7 

6 

1 

1934-35 

8 

10 

4 

3 

1935  36 

13 

5 

4 

3 

1936-37 

9 

10 

4 

8 

193738 

14 

8 

6 

4 

1938  39 

13 

8 

8 

3 

1939-40 

13 

8 

7 

4 

1940-41 

1 

21 

0 

13 

1941-42 

7 

15 

3 

8 

1942-43 

8 

8 

5 

5 

1943-44 

4 

13 

2 

1 

1944-45 

2 

13 

2 

5 

1945-46 

9 

11 

5 

4 

1946-47 

14 

9 

9 

4 

243 

199 

124 

91 

TEAMS  COACHED  BY  "FLUCIE' 

'STEWART: 

1947-48 

11 

13 

9 

7 

1948-49 

9 

17 

8 

7 

1949-50 

7 

18 

5 

13 

27 

48 

22 

27 

TEAMS  COACHED  BY  BUD  MILLIKAIM: 

1950-51 

15 

10 

11 

8 

1951-52 

13 

8 

9 

5 

1952-53 

15 

8 

12 

3 

1953-54 

23 

7 

7 

2 

195455 

17 

7 

10 

4 

1955-56 

14 

10 

7 

7 

1956-57 

15 

9 

9 

5 

1957-58 

22 

7 

9 

5 

1958-59 

10 

13 

7 

7 

1959  60 

15 

8 

9 

5 

1960-61 

14 

12 

6 

8 

1961-62 

8 

17 

3 

11 

1962-63 

8 

13 

4 

10 

1963-64 

9 

17 

5 

9 

1964-65 

18 

8 

10 

4 

1965-66 

14 

11 

7 

7 

1966-67 

11 

14 

5 

9 

241 


179 


130 


109 


TEAMS  COACHED  BY  FRANK  FELLOWS: 

1967-68                          8             16  4             10 

1968  69                     _8         J8  2            12 

16            34  6            22 

TEAMS  COACHED  BY  LEFTY  DRIESELL 

1969  70                       13             13  5               9 
1970-71                        14             12  5               9 

27             25  10             18 


DIRECTORY  OF  COACHES 

Alexander,  Harry,  assistant  football 454.4068 

Beardmore,  Clayton  "Bud",  head  lacrosse  and 

assistant  football 454-4328 

Boutselis,  George  J.,  assistant  football 454-2125 

Campbell,  William  R.,  swimming 454-2756 

Cronin,  Frank  H.,  director  of  golf 454-2131 

Dean,  Bob,  cross  country  and  assistant  track 454-3124 

Driesell,  Charles  G.  "Lefty",  head  basketball 454-2126 

Gardi,  Joe,  assistant  football    454-4068 

Harrington,  Richard  1.  "Joe",  assistant  basketball     454-2126 

Jackson,  Elton  S.  "Jack",  baseball    454.404 1 

Joe,  William  "Billy",  assistant  football 454.4066 

Kovalakides,  Nicholas  J.  "Nick",  track 454-3124 

Kiouse,  William  E.  "Sully",  wrestling    454-2652 

Lester,  E.  Roy,  head  football 454-21 28 

Maloney,  James,  assistant  basketball    454-21 26 

Mark,  Joseph  J.  C,  assistant  football 454-2125 

McHugh,  John,  assistant  wrestling 454-2652 

Montero,  Dim  S.,  assistant  to  athletic  director  and 

to  head  football  coach    454-4066 

O'Connor,  Fred,  assistant  football 454-4066 

Raveling,  George  H.,  assistant  basketball    454-2126 

Rice,  Ron,  assistant  football    454-4066 

Royal,  Doyle  P.,  soccer  and  tennis    454-4598 

Sigler,  David  P.,  associate  golf    454-2131 

Smith,  C.  Rennie,  assistant  lacrosse 454-4328 

Tyler,  Robert  W.,  fencing    45446H 


OTHER  STAFF  PERSONNEL 

Apple,  Harold  C.  "Bud",  grounds  supervisor 454-2825 

Ambrose,  Dave,  assistant  trainer 454-2758 

Bean,  Edward  H.,  business  manager 454-2121 

Faber,  Dr.  John  E.,  faculty  chairman  of  athletics 454-4705 

Fields,  Thomas  M.,  Executive  Director, 

Maryland  Educational  Foundation    454-4562 

Fry,  William,  Jr.,  "Spider",  athletic  trainer 454-4639 

Gable,  Jack,  assistant  equipment  manager 454-2127 

Hanlon,  Alfred  J.,  assistant  director  of  athletics 4544706 

Kehoe,  Charles  K.,  "Lindy",  director  of  facilities 454-2822 

Kehoe,  James  H.,  director  of  athletics 454-4705 

Potts,  Russ,  promotions  director 454-4687 

Redmond  Cecil,  equipment  manager 454-2127 

Wall,  Bob,  assistant  business  manager 454-2121 

Weir,  Jim,  assistant  trainer 454-4639 

Zane,  Jack,  sports  information  director 454-2123 

8644076 


SECRETARIES 

Mrs.  Sally  Bethem,  Secretary  to  Col.  Fields 4544562 

Mrs.  Diane  Estensen,  accountant 454-2121 

Mrs.  Betty  Francis,  Secretary  to  Mr.  Kehoe 454-4705 

Mrs.  Linda  Kubany,  Secretary,  football  office 454-2125 

Miss  Eleanor  Peddicord,  Secretary  to  Coach  Lester 454-2128 

Mrs.  Betty  Puceta,  Secretary  to  Coach  Driesell     454-2126 

Mrs.  Therese  Ryan,  Secretary  to  Mr.  Zane     454-2123 

Mrs.  Karen  Edwards,  Secretary,  Athletic  Department    .  .  .  454-4706 


STUDENT  ASSISTANTS 

Walt  Atkins,  SID  office 454-2123 

Ray  Murphy,  Promotions  office 454-4687 

Larry  StrickJing,  SID  office 454-2123 

Steve  Zaks,  SID  office     454-2123 


45 


YEAR  BY 

YEAR 

RESULTS 


1923-24 

5-7 

1-2 

Maryland 

41 

George  Washington 

22 

42 

Gallaudet 

28 

13 

Catholic 

30 

20 

North  Carolina 

26 

13 

Virginia 

26 

24 

Richmond 

22 

14 

Catholic 

20 

19 

George  Washington 

20 

22 

Washington  &  Lee 

21 

12 

VMI 

21 

34 

*VMI 

19 

25 

'Georgia 
*S.  C.  Tournament 

29 

1924-25 

12-5 

3-1 

Maryland 

24 

Virginia 

18 

H 

24 

Columbia 

23 

A 

21 

Stevens  Institute 

17 

A 

16 

Navy 

23 

A 

30 

Lafayette 

15 

H 

18 

Catholic 

14 

A 

21 

Stevens  Institute 

17 

H 

16 

North  Carolina 

21 

H 

25 

Gallaudet 

14 

H 

16 

Washington  College 

27 

H 

24 

Princeton 

38 

A 

22 

CCNY 

16 

H 

38 

South  Carolina 

22 

H 

36 

Virginia 

25 

A 

27 

Catholic 

17 

H 

27 

"Alabama 

21 

16 

•N.  C.  State 
*S.  C.  Tournament 

30 

1925-26 

14-3 

7-1 

Maryland 

40 

Washington  &  Lee 

27 

H 

21 

Navy 

12 

A 

30 

Richmond 

14 

H 

30 

VMI 

21 

A 

33 

Washington  &  Lee 

20 

A 

19 

VPI 

17 

A 

40 

Gallaudet 

13 

H 

30 

Washington  College 

26 

H 

24 

Stevens  Institute 

27 

H 

30 

VPI 

14 

H 

28 

Virginia 

34 

A 

23 

North  Carolina 

22 

H 

25 

West  Virginia 

15 

H 

41 

Duke 

20 

H 

30 

Virginia 

21 

H 

32 

Princeton 

26 

H 

19 

Mississippi  Aggies 

22 

1926-27 

10-10 

6-4 

Maryland 

16 

American 

21 

A 

44 

Washington  &  Lee 

32 

H 

25 

Michigan 

39 

A 

17 

Virginia 

22 

A 

30 

Navy 

32 

A 

18 

Washington  College 

22 

H 

34 

Georgia 

33 

H 

39 

Gallaudet 

26 

H 

27 

Stevens  Institute 

18 

H 

28 

North  Carolina 

23 

H 

23 

North  Carolina 

32 

H 

26 

Pennsylvania 

21 

A 

32 

Washington  &  Lee 

34 

A 

32 

VMI 

15 

A 

29 

Virginia 

28 

H 

23 

N.  C.  State 

38 

A 

16 

Washington  College 

21 

A 

32 

Western  Maryland 

25 

H 

23 

North  Carolina 

19 

A 

22 

"Georgia 

27 

*S 

C.  Tournament 

46 


1927-28 

14-4 

8-1 

24 

Catholic 

21 

A 

Maryland 

38 

Washington  &  Lee 

24 

33 

North  Carolina 

31 

H 

29 

VPI 

20 

32 

Washington  College 

33 

H 

31 

Washington  &  Lee 

28 

34 

Virginia 

21 

H 

23 

VMI 

9 

45 

Western  Maryland 

35 

H 

45 

Gallaudet 

20 

32 

St.  Johns 

27 

H 

37 
20 

Kentucky 
Johns  Hopkins 

7 
22 

33 
31 

Navy 

Johns  Hopkins 

36 
22 

A 
H 

25 

St   Johns  College 

22 

26 

Virginia 

20 

37 

*LSU 

33 

31 

Stevens  Institute 

24 

19 

"North  Carolina 

17 

26 

Navy 

35 

26 

"Georgia 

25 

26 

Pennsylvania 

30 

29 

"Kentucky 

27 

36 

N.  C.  State 

24 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

12 

Virginia 

34 

(Champions) 

22 

Washington  College 

20 

23 

Johns  Hopkins 

19 

1931-32           16-4 

8-2 

30 

VPI 

10 

30 

Western  Maryland 

29 

Maryland           30 
27 

Wisconsin 
Loyola 

32 
28 

A 
H 

1928-29 

7-9 

2-5 

42 
43 

Washington  &  Lee 
VMI 

38 

28 

A 
A 

Maryland 

30 

William  &  Mary 

20 

H 

26 

Navy 

15 

H 

18 

Pennsylvania 

30 

A 

36 

Virginia 

31 

A 

20 

Randolph  Macon 

33 

H 

33 

Johns  Hopkins 

26 

A 

30 

Virginia 

22 

A 

38 

VMI 

20 

H 

20 

Johns  Hopkins 

30 

H 

51 

VPI 

16 

H 

20 

St.  Johns 

18 

H 

39 

Catholic 

34 

H 

22 

Virginia 

25 

H 

26 

North  Carolina 

25 

H 

22 

Washington  &  Lee 

47 

H 

36 

Washington  College 

16 

H 

29 

VPI 

39 

A 

35 

Western  Maryland 

15 

H 

18 

Washington  &  Lee 

42 

A 

46 

Virginia 

18 

H 

30 

VMI 

27 

A 

49 

Washington  &  Lee 

19 

H 

22 

North  Carolina 

28 

H 

24 

St.  Johns 

20 

H 

30 

Navy 

27 

A 

26 

North  Carolina 

32 

A 

32 

Western  Maryland 

17 

H 

20 

Duke 

18 

A 

19 

Johns  Hopkins 

18 

A 

38 
24 

Johns  Hopkins 
♦Florida 

24 
39 

H 

35 

'Mississippi 
*S.  C.  Tournament 

37 

1932-33           11-9 

*S.  C.  Tournament 
7-3 

1929-30 

16-6 

9-5 

Maryland            13 

Wisconsin 

22 

H 

Maryland 

27 

William  &  Mary 

23 

H 

40 

VPI 

20 

A 

27 

Duke 

28 

H 

30 

Duke 

28 

H 

37 

Catholic 

30 

H 

29 

VMI 

30 

A 

54 

Virginia 

20 

H 

40 

Washington  &  Lee 

43 

A 

41 

Johns  Hopkins 

24 

H 

27 

Johns  Hopkins 

37 

A 

43 

Navy 

39 

A 

37 

VPI 

21 

H 

41 

VPI 

29 

H 

27 

Catholic 

29 

A 

26 

N.  C.  State 

28 

H 

21 

Navy 

59 

A 

25 

Washington  &  Lee 

29 

H 

19 

Virginia 

26 

A 

38 

Western  Maryland 

17 

H 

42 

North  Carolina 

29 

H 

36 

North  Carolina 

24 

H 

36 

Georgia 

40 

H 

34 

VPI 

23 

A 

35 

Washington  College 

27 

H 

44 

VMI 

25 

A 

37 

Virginia 

28 

H 

21 

Washington  &  Lee 

36 

A 

46 

Washington  &  Lee 

28 

H 

51 

Virginia 

29 

H 

45 

VMI 

29 

H 

21 

N.  C.  State 

19 

A 

34 

St.  Johns 

22 

H 

22 

North  Carolina 

19 

A 

37 

Western  Maryland 

32 

H 

24 

Duke 

39 

A 

35 

Johns  Hopkins 

31 

H 

39 

Johns  Hopkins 

24 

A 

39 

VMI 

21 

H 

28 

"South  Carolina 

65 

41 

St.  Johns 

25 

H 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

21 

"Kentucky 

26 

1933-34           11-8 

6-1 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

Maryland           29 
17 

Michigan 
Indiana 

25 
30 

H 
H 

1930-31 

18-4 

8-1 

24 

West  Virginia 

26 

A 

Maryland 

38 

Gallaudet 

27 

H 

37 

Duke 

33 

H 

38 

VMI 

18 

A 

29 

VPI 

24 

A 

36 

Washington  &  Lee 

21 

A 

34 

VPI 

32 

H 

32 

Duke 

24 

H 

32 

Johns  Hopkins 

37 

A 

30 

Loyola 

33 

H 

43 

Virginia 

20 

A 

33 

Johns  Hopkins 

20 

A 

24 

North  Carolina 

28 

H 

44 

VMI 

20 

H 

33 

Catholic 

25 

H 

33 

VPI 

16 

H 

27 

Navy 

46 

A 

31 

Virginia 

34 

A 

28 

Virginia 

25 

H 

28 

Washington  &  Lee 

17 

H 

33 

Richmond 

44 

H 

47 


49 

Western  Maryland 

33 

H 

1937-38           15-9 

7-4 

36 
32 
44 

VMI 

St.  Johns 

Washington  College 

27 
37 
33 

H 
H 
H 

Maryland           26 
26 
50 

Richmond 

Michigan 

Baltimore 

31 
33 
32 

H 
H 
A 

32 

Johns  Hopkins 

19 

H 

43 

Randolph  Macon 

27 

H 

37 

•Washington  &  Lee 
*S.  C.  Tournament 

45 

29 

42 

Washington  &  Lee 
VMI 

31 
27 

A 
A 

39 

Georgetown 

57 

A 

40 

Duke 

35 

H 

1934-35          8-10 

4-5 

24 

North  Carolina 

43 

A 

Maryland           25 
50 

Indiana 
Ohio  State 

30 
41 

H 
H 

34 
42 

Duke 
VPI 

44 
35 

A 
H 

29 

West  Virginia 

39 

H 

34 

Navy 

37 

A 

35 

South  Carolina 

21 

H 

27 

NYU 

42 

H 

39 

VMI 

24 

H 

36 

Washington  &  Lee 

32 

H 

39 

Duke 

48 

H 

45 

William  &  Mary 

38 

H 

43 
31 

Washington  College 
North  Carolina 

27 
39 

H 
H 

43 
49 

VMI 
Catholic 

33 
33 

H 
H 

36 

Navy 

43 

A 

43 

Washington  College 

42 

A 

44 

Virginia 

24 

H 

39 

57 

Virginia 
Dickinson 

23 
27 

A 
H 

26 

Richmond 

56 

H 

29 

Catholic 

45 

A 

56 

Johns  Hopkins 

30 

H 

29 

Washington  &  Lee 

33 

H 

38 

St.  Johns 

29 

H 

33 
41 
17 

Virginia 
Johns  Hopkins 
St.  Johns 

32 
35 
24 

A 
A 
H 

45 
32 

'Citadel 
*Duke 
*S.  C.  Tournament 

43 
35 

52 

Johns  Hopkins 

25 

H 

24 

Georgetown 

25 

H 

1938-39          15-9 

8-3 

1935-36           14-6 

3-3 

Maryland           34 

Richmond 

41 

A 

45 

Clemson 

35 

H 

Maryland           44 

VMI 

29 

H 

44 

Davidson 

27 

H 

27 

Washington  &  Lee 

30 

A 

24 

Pennsylvania 

36 

A 

53 

VMI 

32 

A 

25 

Army 

45 

A 

32 

Navy 

20 

A 

37 

Navy 

47 

A 

28 

Richmond 

24 

H 

37 

Duke 

34 

H 

55 

Baltimore 

33 

H 

34 

North  Carolina 

32 

H 

46 

Washington  College 

34 

H 

34 

Hampden-Sydney 

25 

H 

32 

North  Carolina 

44 

H 

31 

Virginia 

21 

H 

41 

William  &  Mary 

39 

H 

60 

Duke 

44 

A 

38 

Duke 

34 

H 

66 

North  Carolina 

41 

A 

40 

Virginia 

34 

H 

40 

N.  C.  State 

46 

A 

26 

West  Virginia 

51 

A 

25 

Georgetown 

39 

H 

54 

Washington  &  Lee 

55 

H 

39 

Washington  &  Lee 

37 

H 

40 

St.  Johns 

28 

H 

49 

William  &  Mary 

57 

H 

29 

Catholic 

40 

H 

48 

St.  Johns 

20 

A 

56 

Washington  College 

30 

A 

53 

VMI 

35 

H 

45 

Johns  Hopkins 

40 

H 

40 

Catholic 

38 

A 

47 

Georgetown 

39 

A 

24 

George  Washington 

37 

A 

47 

Washington  College 

37 

H 

47 

*Duke 

35 

32 

'Washington  &  Lee 

38 

47 

•Richmond 

32 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

53 
27 

•N.  C.  State 
•Clemson 

29 

39 

1936-37          9-11 

4-8 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

Maryland           40 

Richmond 

51 

A 

1939-40          14-9 

7-4 

54 

Johns  Hopkins 

31 

H 

27 

Washington  &  Lee 

51 

A 

Maryland           48 

Western  Maryland 

32 

H 

48 

VMI 

28 

A 

47 

Randolph  Macon 

16 

H 

48 

Western  Maryland 

36 

H 

53 

Clemson 

26 

H 

31 

Duke 

34 

A 

34 

Pennsylvania 

41 

A 

41 

Washington  College 

20 

H 

51 

Rutgers 

39 

A 

37 

Virginia 

23 

H 

53 

Rhode  Island  State 

59 

A 

33 

N.  C.  State 

35 

A 

32 

Duke 

30 

H 

24 

North  Carolina 

41 

A 

35 

Richmond 

19 

H 

30 

Duke 

34 

A 

28 

Georgetown 

27 

A 

37 

Navy 

53 

A 

49 

VPI 

41 

H 

35 

North  Carolina 

44 

H 

25 

Washington  &  Lee 

44 

H 

41 

William  &  Mary 

29 

H 

43 

N.  C.  State 

36 

A 

45 

VMI 

28 

H 

30 

Clemson 

48 

A 

35 

Washington  &  Lee 

41 

H 

30 

South  Carolina 

33 

A 

27 

Georgetown 

39 

H 

37 

Duke 

48 

A 

37 

St.  Johns 

39 

A 

49 

Johns  Hopkins 

36 

H 

41 

N.  C.  State 

35 

H 

60 

VMI 

33 

A 

19 

Washington  &  Lee 

39 

A 

35 

•N.  C.State 

42 

46 

Catholic 

31 

H 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

27 

VMI 

25 

H 

48 


26 


George  Washington 


43 

•Washington  &  Lee 

32 

*Duke 
*S.  C.  Tournament 

1940-41 

1-21 

0-13 

Maryland 

36 

Richmond 

24 

Johns  Hopkins 

34 

Clemson 

32 

Pennsylvania 

26 

Duke 

41 

Washington  &  Lee 

30 

VMI 

34 

Georgetown 

36 

North  Carolina 

17 

Richmond 

17 

Duke 

29 

North  Carolina 

27 

Navy 

18 

Virginia 

15 

Washington  &  Lee 

28 

George  Washington 

40 

William  &  Mary 

43 

Connecticut 

45 

Rutgers 

27 

VMI 

39 

VPI 

26 

Washington  College 

1941-42 

7-15 

3-8 

Maryland 

41 

Richmond 

34 

William  &  Mary 

36 

West  Virginia 

15 

Seton  Hall 

40 

CCNY 

48 

St.  Johns  (NY) 

35 

Virginia 

33 

Duke 

28 

Washington  College 

51 

Georgetown 

29 

George  Washington 

36 

Virginia 

41 

VMI 

44 

Washington  &  Lee 

28 

Washington  &  Lee 

47 

Navy 

42 

William  &  Mary 

27 

West  Virginia 

32 

Army 

30 

North  Carolina 

46 

Duke 

39 

VMI 

1942-43 

8-8 

5-5 

Maryland 

32 

Richmond 

47 

North  Carolina 

53 

Virginia 

49 

Pennsylvania 

40 

Washington  &  Lee 

34 

VMI 

43 

George  Washington 

63 

Navy 

40 

Army 

43 

Duke 

55 

Washington  &  Lee 

56 

Virginia 

40 

North  Carolina 

36 

Georgetown 

51 

William  &  Mary 

35 

VMI 

1943-44 

4-13 

2-1 

Maryland 

33 

Quantico  Marines 

39 

Marshall 

20 

Bainbridge  Navy 

20 

Virginia 

44 


30 
44 


48 
38 
48 
43 
40 
59 
64 
51 
55 
38 
43 
44 
52 
47 
42 
61 
58 
52 
50 
41 
48 
18 


23 
39 
63 
59 
57 
64 
34 
37 
25 
42 
47 
26 
46 
52 
30 
61 
32 
41 
44 
34 
64 
36 


28 
40 
49 
51 
50 
35 
48 
54 
44 
46 
35 
42 
31 
46 
36 
36 


59 
46 
52 
52 


H 
A 
H 
A 
H 
A 
A 
A 
H 
A 
A 
A 
A 
A 
H 
A 
H 
H 
H 
H 
H 
H 


A 
A 
A 
A 
A 
A 
A 
A 
H 
A 
H 
H 
A 
A 
H 
A 
H 
H 
A 
H 
H 
H 


H 
H 
H 
A 
A 
A 
A 
A 
A 
H 
H 
A 
A 
H 
H 
H 


H 
H 

H 

A 


1944-45 

Maryland 


1945-46 

Maryland 


1946-47 

Maryland 


43 

VMI 

36 

H 

43 

Hampden-Sydn 

ey 

51 

H 

25 

Bainbridge  Navy 

78 

A 

29 

Fort  Belvoir 

60 

H 

33 

Catholic 

31 

H 

26 

Virginia 

49 

H 

33 

Catholic 

53 

A 

34 

Richmond 

65 

A 

48 

Wood  row  Gen 

Hosp. 

26 

H 

25 

Wood  row  Gen 

Hosp. 

35 

A 

31 

VMI 

29 

A 

35 

Navy 

69 

A 

22 

Army 

85 

A 

23 

•N.  C.  State 
*S.  C.  Tournament 

42 

2-14  2-5 

26  Gallaudet 

28  North  Carolina 

24  Duke 

32  N.  C.  State 

33  Navy 

46  VMI 

34  Marine  Corps  Inst. 
42  N.  C.  State 

42  Hampden-Sydney 

26  Virginia 

27  VMI 

33  Virginia 

53  William  &  Mary 

41  Merchant  Marine 

34  Army 

49  *Duke 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

9-12  5-5 

61  Marine  Corps  Inst. 

43  Marshall 

47  Quantico  Marines 

25  Duke 

47  N.  C.  State 

28  North  Carolina 

35  Navy 

37  N.  C.  State 

45  Virginia 

43  Duke 

35  Hampden-Sydney 

48  George  Washington 
31  North  Carolina 

37  Virginia 

43  Merchant  Marine 

37  Richmond 

36  WilliamS  Mary 
33  West  Virginia 
25  Army 

31  Merchant  Marine 

27  *N.  C.  State 
*S.  C.  Tournament 

14-10  9-4 

43  West  Virginia 

49  Western  Maryland 

41  Johns  Hopkins 

62  Quantico  Marines 

42  North  Carolina 
39  Richmond 

44  George  Washington 
65  Washington  &  Lee 
57  VPI 

61  VMI 

61  North  Carolina 

27  Navy 

59  Washington  &  Lee 

55  Georgetown 


27 

H 

53 

A 

51 

A 

46 

A 

70 

A 

28 

H 

50 

H 

57 

H 

43 

H 

57 

A 

35 

A 

61 

H 

46 

A 

54 

A 

54 

A 

76 


46 

H 

50 

H 

50 

H 

59 

A 

39 

A 

64 

A 

44 

A 

33 

H 

48 

A 

38 

H 

32 

H 

35 

H 

33 

H 

36 

H 

39 

H 

31 

H 

42 

A 

35 

H 

52 

A 

48 

A 

54 


81 

A 

39 

H 

36 

H 

48 

A 

58 

A 

41 

H 

43 

H 

60 

A 

49 

A 

50 

A 

57 

H 

55 

A 

50 

H 

49 

H 

49 


48 

George  Washington 

63 

H 

65 

Washington  &  Lee 

46 

H 

49 

Richmond 

68 

A 

52 

Pennsylvania 

54 

A 

55 

VPI 

42 

H 

55 

Clemson 

60 

H 

38 

Duke 

40 

H 

62 

Navy 

75 

A 

47 

Kings  Point 

73 

A 

71 

Ohio  Wesleyan 

75 

H 

57 

Army 

54 

A 

53 

North  Carolina 

55 

A 

52 

Citadel 

40 

H 

46 

Duke 

58 

A 

53 

VMI 

45 

H 

71 

Georgetown 

65 

A 

54 

Pennsylvania 

80 

A 

52 

William  &  Mary 

56 

H 

49 

Richmond 

59 

A 

43 

*N.  C.  State 

55 

51 

George  Washington 

72 

H 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

56 

William  &  Mary 

64 

A 

65 

VMI 

53 

H 

1947-48          11-14 

9-7 

56 

North  Carolina 

69 

H 

Maryland           63 

Western  Maryland 

58 

A 

61 

VMI 

62 

A 

52 

Loyola 

63 

H 

67 

Duke 

57 

H 

59 

Davidson 

58 

H 

56 

South  Carolina 

61 

H 

64 

Washington  &  Lee 

70 

A 

70 

Virginia 

52 

H 

53 

VMI 

46 

A 

64 

Davidson 

61 

H 

64 

Johns  Hopkins 

53 

A 

67 

Richmond 

48 

H 

46 

North  Carolina 

70 

A 

44 

South  Carolina 

59 

A 

42 

Duke 

53 

A 

68 

Clemson 

70 

A 

40 
49 

Georgetown 
Clemson 

52 
42 

A 

H 

1950-51           16-11 

11-8 

44 

Virginia 

64 

A 

Maryland           59 

Virginia 

57 

H 

47 

Navy 

51 

A 

65 

Pennsylvania 

74 

A 

68 

South  Carolina 

54 

H 

48 

William.  &  Mary 

41 

H 

63 

VMI 

48 

H 

46 

Virginia 

43 

A 

44 

Army 

48 

A 

52 

Washington  &  Lee 

43 

H 

64 

Washington  &  Lee 

38 

H 

51 

Rutgers 

45 

H 

49 

George  Washington 

65 

A 

67 

North  Carolina 

59 

A 

47 

North  Carolina 

51 

H 

48 

Richmond 

42 

A 

56 

Virginia 

68 

H 

47 

Navy 

51 

A 

60 

Richmond 

53 

H 

58 

Georgetown 

47 

H 

54 

South  Carolina 

53 

A 

57 

VPI 

66 

H 

63 

Clemson 

61 

A 

56 

North  Carolina 

55 

H 

62 

Richmond 

64 

A 

57 

Davidson 

55 

A 

35 

George  Washington 

59 

H 

43 

South  Carolina 

70 

A 

44 

Clemson 

50 

A 

51 

'Davidson 

58 

65 

Washington  &  Lee 

83 

A 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

46 

VMI 

41 

A 

47 

South  Carolina 

37 

H 

1948-49          9-18 

8-7 

64 

West  Virginia 

70 

H 

Maryland           49 

Temple 

67 

A 

40 

Duke 

49 

H 

60 

VPI 

51 

H 

50 

William  &  Mary 

55 

A 

75 

Loyola  (Baltimore) 

77 

A 

54 

Clemson 

50 

H 

45 

Richmond 

54 

H 

42 

Richmond 

33 

H 

47 

Virginia 

53 

H 

47 

George  Washington 

67 

A 

74 

Clemson 

50 

H 

65 

VMI 

46 

H 

47 

North  Carolina 

55 

A 

50 

'Clemson 

48 

49 

Davidson 

52 

A 

45 

*N.  C.State 

54 

43 

Virginia 

79 

A 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

51 

Georgetown 

53 

A 

67 

Pennsylvania 

81 

A 

1951-52           13-9 

9-5 

46 

Navy 

52 

A 

Maryland           59 

Virginia 

42 

A 

54 

George  Washington 

66 

H 

71 

Washington  &  Lee 

51 

H 

43 

Miami  (Ohio) 

42 

A 

52 

Pennsylvania 

53 

A 

48 

Miami  (Ohio) 

58 

A 

54 

William  &  Mary 

53 

H 

33 

Cincinnati 

70 

A 

36 

West  Virginia 

39 

A 

53 

VMI 

45 

A 

57 

VMI 

39 

A 

66 

Washington  &  Lee 

60 

A 

51 

Washington  &  Lee 

43 

A 

79 

South  Carolina 

49 

H 

47 

North  Carolina 

51 

A 

42 

North  Carolina 

66 

H 

48 

Navy 

45 

A 

52 

Georgetown 

56 

H 

63 

Virginia 

53 

H 

57 

South  Carolina 

56 

A 

55 

Georgetown 

40 

H 

49 

Clemson 

68 

A 

55 

Rutgers 

61 

A 

66 

Richmond 

51 

A 

71 

North  Carolina 

51 

H 

42 

George  Washington 

61 

A 

64 

VMI 

46 

H 

70 

VMI 

55 

H 

55 

Richmond 

45 

H 

66 

William  &  Mary 

71 

A 

61 

'North  Carolina 

79 

51 

Duke 

56 

A 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

61 

Georgetown 

71 

A 

54 

Richmond 

50 

A 

1949-50           7-18 

5-13 

56 

George  Washington 

57 

H 

71 

Davidson 

48 

H 

Maryland           57 

VPI 

63 

A 

40 

Tennessee 

61 

A 

48 

'Duke 

51 

56 

Virginia 

66 

A 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

50 


1952-53           15-8 

12-3 

67 

William  &  Mary 

62 

A 

Maryland           71 

Virginia 

61 

H 

67 

George  Washington 

73 

H 

64 

William  &  Mary 

61 

H 

63 

North  Carolina 

61 

H 

53 

Pennsylvania 

70 

A 

68 

Clemson 

66 

H 

52 

West  Virginia 

45 

H 

58 

N.  C.  State 

78 

A 

54 

VMI 

37 

A 

71 

Wake  Forest 

75 

A 

58 

Washington  &  Lee 

40 

A 

57 

Georgetown 

48 

A 

49 

North  Carolina 

59 

A 

59 

Virginia 

56 

A 

67 

Virginia 

68 

ACC 

63 

Richmond 

60 

A 

45 

Georgetown 

54 

H 

1955-56           14-10 

7-7 

65 

VPI 

46 

H 

68 

North  Carolina 

66 

H 

Maryland           67 

Virginia 

55 

H 

62 

George  Washington 

63 

A 

52 

William  &  Mary 

51 

H 

70 

VPI 

56 

A 

61 

Wake  Forest 

51 

H 

46 

Richmond 

49 

H 

61 

Kentucky 

62 

H 

67 

VMI 

41 

H 

62 

North  Carolina 

68 

H 

87 

Washington  &  Lee 

56 

H 

75 

Michigan  State 

95 

H 

79 

William  &  Mary 

57 

A 

75 

St.  Francis 

66 

H 

48 

Georgetown 

49 

A 

76 

South  Carolina 

57 

H 

47 

Navy 

51 

A 

62 

George  Washington 

48 

H 

66 

George  Washington 

53 

H 

71 

Clemson 

63 

A 

59 

South  Carolina 

53 

A 

74 

"Duke 

65 

64 

N.  C.  State 

73 

H 

59 

'Wake  Forest 

61 

62 

Duke 

76 

A 

*S.  C.  Tournament 

55 

North  Carolina 

64 

A 

62 

Georgetown 

57 

A 

80 

Navy 

61 

H 

1953-54           23-7 

7-2 

70 

Duke 

82 

H 

Maryland           53 

South  Carolina 

49 

A 

67 

George  Washington 

46 

A 

81 

Clemson 

41 

A 

81 

Clemson 

69 

H 

54 

Wake  Forest 

71 

A 

71 

N.  C.  State 

62 

A 

69 

William  &  Mary 

54 

A 

60 

Wake  Forest 

76 

A 

71 

West  Virginia 

87 

A 

60 

Virginia 

73 

A 

60 

VPI 

52 

H 

72 

Georgetown 

61 

H 

79 

South  Carolina 

48 

H 

65 

Arizona  State 

50 

A 

69 

Duke 

94 

ACC 

66 

Evansville 

58 

A 

54 

Ky.  Wesleyan 

37 

A 

1956-57           15-9 

9-5 

72 

Richmond 

64 

A 

Maryland           67 

Virginia 

63 

A 

70 

Virginia 

64 

H 

62 

Fordham 

68 

H 

75 

Clemson 

54 

H 

59 

Wake  Forest 

53 

H 

56 

Georgetown 

58 

A 

55 

Kentucky 

76 

A 

71 

Richmond 

73 

H 

61 

North  Carolina 

70 

A 

68 

George  Washington 

61 

H 

89 

Montana  State 

72 

A 

70 

Virginia 

56 

A 

43 

New  Mexico  A  &  M 

45 

A 

61 

Tampa 

51 

A 

43 

Virginia 

39 

A 

63 

Miami  (Flal 

57 

A 

59 

Clemson 

52 

A 

51 

Washington  &  Lee 

25 

A 

60 

South  Carolina 

68 

A 

54 

VPI 

41 

A 

62 

Duke 

51 

H 

76 

Washington  &  Lee 

43 

H 

68 

George  Washington 

48 

A 

61 

Navy 

60 

A 

66 

South  Carolina 

59 

H 

74 

Wake  Forest 

53 

H 

82 

Georgetown 

69 

H 

61 

Duke 

68 

H 

79 

N.  C.  State 

66 

H 

53 

Georgetown 

50 

H 

60 

Duke 

72 

A 

57 

George  Washington 

70 

A 

84 

George  Washington 

67 

H 

74 

William  &  Mary 

55 

H 

61 

North  Carolina 

65 

H 

85 

Virginia 

64 

H 

75 

Clemson 

59 

ACC 

56 

N.  C.  State 

49 

A 

56 

Wake  Forest 

64 

ACC 

58 

Wake  Forest 

62 

A 

55 

Navy 

56 

A 

1954-55          17-7 

10-4 

74 

Clemson 

65 

H 

62 

Georgetown 

59 

A 

Maryland           60 

Georgetown 

43 

H 

49 

Duke 

47 

H 

71 

Virginia 

68 

ACC 

58 

Wake  Forest 

62 

H 

64 

South  Carolina 

74 

ACC 

72 

Virginia 

69 

A 

61 

Duke 

68 

A 

1957-58           22-7 

9-5 

70 

North  Carolina 

60 

A 

58 

Texas  Tech 

54 

A 

Maryland            64 

George  Washington 

55 

H 

83 

Rhode  Island 

66 

A 

61 

Fordham 

58 

A 

78 

Cincinnati 

61 

A 

71 

Kentucky 

62 

H 

68 

South  Carolina 

51 

H 

72 

Wake  Forest 

58 

H 

78 

Virginia 

65 

H 

88 

Navy 

58 

H 

71 

Clemson 

63 

A 

71 

Vanderbilt 

56 

A 

68 

South  Carolina 

52 

A 

46 

Memphis  State 

47 

A 

68 

N.  C.  State 

64 

H 

72 

South  Carolina 

59 

A 

53 

George  Washington 

75 

A 

66 

Clemson 

73 

A 

60 

Navy 

54 

A 

74 

Duke 

49 

H 

51 


74 

North  Carolina 

61 

H 

55 

Georgetown 

45 

A 

48 

N.  C.  State 

57 

H 

64 

Navy 

51 

A 

87 

Virginia 

66 

A 

74 

Wake  Forest 

67 

A 

72 

Clemson 

54 

H 

64 

N.  C.  State 

69 

A 

69 

Virginia 

56 

H 

59 

Duke 

68 

A 

59 

North  Carolina 

66 

A 

56 

Georgetown 

46 

H 

99 

South  Carolina 

59 

H 

70 

Virginia 

66 

ACC 

71 

Duke 

65 

ACC 

86 

North  Carolina 

74 

ACC 

86 

Boston  College 

63 

NCAA 

67 

Temple 

71 

NCAA 

59 

Manhattan 

55 

NCAA 

1958-59 

10-13 

7  7 

Maryland 

53 

N.  C.  State 

55 

H 

62 

Northwestern 

66 

A 

63 

Virginia 

56 

H 

56 

Kentucky 

58 

A 

50 

Navy 

53 

H 

68 

Wake  Forest 

65 

H 

45 

Mississippi  State 

56 

A 

54 

Loyola 

50 

A 

64 

Duke 

31 

H 

59 

South  Carolina 

41 

A 

46 

Clemson 

55 

A 

61 

Georgetown 

53 

H 

69 

Duke 

78 

A 

57 

North  Carolina 

64 

A 

53 

Wake  Forest 

56 

A 

65 

George  Washington 

66 

H 

37 

N.  C.  State 

53 

A 

77 

Clemson 

58 

H 

50 

Virginia 

62 

A 

69 

North  Carolina 

51 

H 

67 

Georgetown 

56 

A 

75 

South  Carolina 

45 

H 

1959-60 


65 


15-8 


Virginia 


9-6 


Maryland           64 

George  Washington 

70 

Virginia 

59 

Georgetown 

47 

Wake  Forest 

63 

Indiana 

76 

Fordham 

103 

Yale 

85 

South  Carolina 

51 

Georgetown 

56 

Duke 

63 

N.  C.  State 

51 

Navy 

66 

North  Carolina 

64 

Wake  Forest 

44 

Virginia 

46 

N.  C.  State 

70 

Clemson 

71 

Duke 

86 

George  Washington 

64 

North  Carolina 

67 

Clemson 

72 

South  Carolina 

58 

N. C.  State 

1960-61           14-12 

6-8 

Maryland           64 

Penn  State 

57 

Virginia 

66 


57 
62 
48 
54 
72 
54 
80 
52 
66 
48 
53 
50 
75 
65 
43 
48 
55 
61 
84 
81 
59 
55 

74 


47 
52 


ACC 


A 
H 
H 
H 
A 
A 
H 
H 
A 
A 
H 
A 
H 
A 
A 
A 
H 
H 
H 
A 
A 
A 

ACC 


H 
A 


80 

George  Washington 

68 

H 

64 

Minnesota 

53 

A 

78 

Georgetown 

67 

A 

60 

Wake  Forest 

72 

H 

57 

North  Carolina 

81 

A 

67 

N.  C.  State 

75 

A 

84 

Wyoming 

77 

A 

72 

South  Carolina 

58 

H 

55 

Georgetown 

47 

H 

62 

Duke 

70 

A 

52 

North  Carolina 

58 

H 

63 

Navy 

62 

H 

75 

N.  C.  State 

57 

A 

56 

North  Carolina 

63 

A 

69 

Wake  Forest 

78 

A 

59 

Clemson 

76 

A 

61 

South  Carolina 

64 

A 

66 

N.  C.  State 

83 

A 

76 

Duke 

71 

H 

44 

George  Washington 

63 

A 

77 

Virginia 

62 

H 

82 

Clemson 

80 

H 

91 

Clemson 

75 

ACC 

76 

Wake  Forest 

98 

ACC 

1961-62          8-17 

3-11 

Maryland           65 

Penn  State 

71 

A 

78 

Georgetown 

79 

H 

68 

N.  C.  State 

73 

H 

75 

Minnesota 

69 

H 

79 

Wake  Forest 

62 

H 

91 

Virginia 

70 

A 

62 

Mississippi  State 

64 

A 

64 

Louisville 

83 

A 

67 

George  Washington 

56 

A 

77 

South  Carolina 

86 

H 

83 

Georgetown 

70 

A 

68 

Duke 

84 

A 

81 

George  Washington 

67 

H 

61 

N.  C.  State 

68 

A 

71 

Miami  (Fla) 

68 

A 

58 

Navy 

67 

A 

79 

North  Carolina 

62 

H 

68 

South  Carolina 

85 

A 

61 

Clemson 

73 

A 

53 

Duke 

79 

H 

78 

Wake  Forest 

81 

A 

67 

North  Carolina 

70 

A 

68 

Virginia 

72 

H 

68 

Clemson 

75 

H 

58  Duke  71  ACC 

1962-63  8-13  4-10 

Maryland  61  Penn  State 

70  Georgetown 

56  Duke 

74  N.  C.  State 

67  Virginia 
74  Wake  Forest 

68  South  Carolina 
74  George  Washington 

67  Navy 
56  North  Carolina 

59  N.  C.  State 

68  George  Washington 
73  Georgetown 

68  North  Carolina 

60  Clemson 
51  South  Carolina 
54  Wake  Forest 

69  Virginia 

70  Duke 
69  Clemson 

41  Wake  Forest  80  ACC 


62 

H 

79 

A 

92 

A 

76 

H 

61 

A 

85 

H 

63 

H 

72 

H 

61 

H 

78 

H 

79 

A 

67 

A 

72 

H 

82 

A 

62 

A 

44 

A 

75 

A 

71 

H 

76 

H 

67 

H 

52 


1963-64 

Maryland 


1964-65 

Maryland 


1965-66 

Maryland 


9-17 

68 
72 
62 
72 
74 
56 
59 
75 
54 
82 
69 
55 
88 
65 
91 
80 
67 
72 
77 
74 
73 
63 
78 
68 
64 

67 

18  8 

72 
82 
59 
62 
73 
82 
61 
66 
73 
76 
67 
75 
77 
93 
67 
91 
64 
86 
85 
52 
70 
85 
88 
73 

61 
67 

14-11 

61 
87 
59 
62 
63 
77 
74 
69 
77 
52 
62 
61 
58 
107 
66 
78 
76 
86 


5  9 


Virginia 

58 

H 

Georgetown 

83 

A 

Penn  State 

91 

A 

N.  C.  State 

62 

H 

West  Virginia 

72 

H 

Clemson 

48 

H 

Tennessee 

70 

A 

LSU 

65 

A 

Arizona 

57 

A 

Columbia 

76 

A 

South  Carolina 

73 

H 

Navy 

68 

A 

North  Carolina 

97 

A 

N.  C.  State 

66 

A 

Wake  Forest 

82 

A 

George  Washington 

76 

A 

West  Virginia 

91 

A 

Duke 

104 

H 

Wake  Forest 

79 

H 

North  Carolina 

64 

H 

Virginia 

79 

A 

Duke 

84 

A 

Georgetown 

81 

H 

Clemson 

83 

A 

South  Carolina 

74 

A 

Clemson 

81 

AC 

10-4 

Penn  State 

George  Washington 

Virginia 

N.  C.  State 

West  Virginia 

Wake  Forest 

Kansas 

Tulsa 

Miami  (Fla) 

North  Carolina 

Clemson 

South  Carolina 

Navy 

Wake  Forest 

N.  C.  State 

North  Carolina 

Duke 

West  Virginia 

Georgetown 

Virginia 

Navy 

Duke 

Clemson 

South  Carolina 

Clemson 
N.  C.State 

7-7 

Penn  State 

Wake  Forest 

N.  C.  State 

Kansas 

Kansas  State 

Georgetown 

West  Virginia 

Houston 

Dayton 

North  Carolina 

Virginia 

Duke 

N.  C.  State 

George  Washington 

Clemson 

South  Carolina 

North  Carolina 

Wake  Forest 


71 

H 

80 

H 

61 

A 

63 

H 

80 

H 

64 

H 

63 

H 

59 

A 

80 

A 

68 

H 

65 

A 

70 

A 

58 

H 

85 

A 

73 

A 

80 

A 

82 

A 

78 

A 

67 

A 

47 

H 

57 

A 

82 

H 

71 

H 

59 

H 

50 

ACC 

76 

ACC 

1966-67 

Maryland 


1967-68 

Maryland 


74 
107 
71 
69 
56 
69 

70 

11-14 

76 
54 
63 
85 
50 
53 
59 
66 
57 
60 
82 
69 
68 
58 
53 
77 
78 
49 
87 
65 
58 
78 
61 
64 

54 

8-16 

71 
84 
62 
66 
60 
53 
72 
59 
52 
79 
52 
93 
76 
73 
67 
64 
66 
85 
87 
60 
81 
68 


65 

66 

A 
H 

68 

48 
71 

H 

A 

54 

57 
59 

A 
H 

1968-69 

8-18 

76 

A 

Mary 

and 

66 

68 

A 

65 

75 

A 

67 

67 

A 

63 

65 

H 

87 

76 

A 

99 

60 

A 

89 

81 

A 

85 

71 

A 

69 

63 

A 

95 

66 

H 

71 

78 

A 

69 

Navy 

West  Virginia 

Virginia 

Duke 

South  Carolina 

Clemson 

North  Carolina 

5-9 

Penn  State 

N.  C.  State 

South  Carolina 

Virginia 

Oklahoma  State 

Memphis  State 

Wake  Forest 

Davidson 

Army 

N.  C.  State 

West  Virginia 

Duke 

Clemson 

West  Virginia 

South  Carolina 

North  Carolina 

George  Washington 

Georgetown 

Virginia 

Navy 

Duke 

North  Carolina 

Clemson 

Wake  Forest 

South  Carolina 

4-10 

Penn  State 

George  Washington 

N.  C.  State 

South  Carolina 

Wake  Forest 

Texas  El  Paso 

Southern  Illinois 

South  Carolina 

N.  C.  State 

West  Virginia 

Duke 

Clemson 

Navy 

Miami  (Fla) 

North  Carolina 

Duke 

West  Virginia 

Virginia 

Wake  Forest 

North  Carolina 

Clemson 

Virginia 

Georgetown 

N.  C.  State 

2-12 

Penn  State 

West  Virginia 

South  Carolina 

Princeton 

Wake  Forest 

George  Washington 

Marshall 

Miami  (Fla) 

Davidson 

Wichita 

Wake  Forest 

N.  C.  State 


69 

H 

92 

H 

64 

A 

74 

H 

42 

H 

81 

H 

77 


57 


63 


ACC 


53 

H 

38 

A 

65 

H 

65 

A 

49 

A 

55 

A 

68 

H 

65 

A 

54 

A 

55 

H 

81 

A 

72 

H 

48 

H 

61 

H 

80 

A 

85 

A 

52 

H 

80 

A 

76 

H 

66 

A 

81 

A 

79 

H 

65 

A 

78 

A 

ACC 


76 

A 

53 

A 

75 

H 

65 

H 

73 

A 

70 

A 

73 

A 

68 

A 

68 

A 

75 

H 

84 

H 

94 

A 

72 

H 

93 

A 

73 

H 

85 

A 

83 

A 

76 

H 

74 

H 

83 

A 

68 

H 

70 

A 

60 

H 

ACC 


56 

H 

86 

A 

79 

A 

72 

H 

95 

A 

96 

H 

80 

A 

92 

A 

83 

A 

83 

A 

93 

A 

85 

A 

53 


1969-70 

Maryland 


67 
85 
83 
77 
87 
81 
91 
83 
68 
78 
86 
84 
83 

71 

13-13 

97 
92 
67 
87 
68 
54 
94 
94 
57 
96 
83 
44 
75 
73 
97 
52 
69 
54 
81 
69 
83 
76 
103 
78 
79 

57 


South  Carolina 

Duke 

Clem  son 

Virginia 

North  Carolina 

N.  C.  State 

West  Virginia 

Duke 

Navy 

Virginia 

North  Carolina 

Clemson 

Georgetown 

South  Carolina 

59 

Buffalo 

George  Washington 

Princeton 

Wake  Forest 

South  Carolina 

Army 

Fordham 

Delaware 

N.  C.  State 

Wake  Forest 

West  Virginia 

South  Carolina 

Clemson 

Navy 

Maine 

Duke 

North  Carolina 

N.  C.  State 

Georgetown 

Virginia 

North  Carolina 

Duke 

Clemson 

West  Virginia 

Virginia 

N.  C.  State 


69 

H 

96 

A 

78 

H 

78 

H 

107 

A 

86 

H 

84 

H 

93 

H 

72 

A 

84 

A 

88 

H 

83 

A 

78 

A 

92 


77 
71 
75 
104 
101 
69 
71 
58 
91 
88 
76 
55 
63 
57 
68 
50 
77 
64 
71 
71 
90 
87 
85 
83 
71 

67 


ACC 


H 
A 
A 
H 
H 
H 
H 
H 
A 
A 
H 
A 
A 
H 
H 
H 
H 
A 
H 
A 
A 
A 
H 
A 
H 

ACC 


1970-71 

14-12 

5-9 

Maryland 

86 

Delaware 

73 

H 

109 

Buffalo 

70 

H 

85 

Lehigh 

66 

H 

72 

Wake  Forest 

71 

H 

70 

South  Carolina 

96 

A 

79 

Georgetown 

96 

A 

80 

Tampa 

72 

H 

111 

Miami  (Fla.) 

77 

H 

99 

Richmond 

67 

H 

81 

N.  C.  State 

83 

H 

31 

South  Carolina 

30 

H 

56 

Clemson 

52 

H 

69 

George  Washington 

67 

H 

88 

Loyola  (Md.) 

69 

A 

70 

North  Carolina 

105 

A 

61 

N.  C.  State 

71 

A 

88 

Duke 

79 

A 

63 

Virginia 

78 

A 

67 

Duke 

70 

H 

76 

North  Carolina 

100 

H 

56 

Seton  Hall 

55 

A 

45 

Clemson 

51 

A 

81 

West  Virginia 

83 

H 

66 

Wake  Forest 

72 

A 

89 

Virginia 

84 

H 

63 

South  Carolina 

71 

A 

Mrs.  Betty  Puceta  is  an  extremely  valuable  member  of  the 
basketball  staff  at  the  University.  As  Secretary  to  Coach 
Driesell  she  has  a  full  time  job  just  keeping  track  of  his 
appointments.  She  is  always  available  to  assist  any  member 
of  the  communications  media  in  contacting  any  member  of 
the  coaching  staff. 


Lefty  Driesell  discusses  basketball  with  Tom  Jones  after  a 
visit  by  the  entertainer  to  Cole  Field  House. 


54 


LEFTY'S   BASKETBALL  SCHOOL 

The  eighth  annual  Lefty  Driesell  Basketball  School  will  be  held  on  the  University  of  Maryland  Campus  next  summer.  The 
four  sessions  are  scheduled  for  June  25  thru  July  1 ,  July  2  thru  July  8,  July  30  thru  August  5  and  the  final  week  August  6 
thru  August  12. 

Last  summer  nearly  a  thousand  youngsters,  8-18,  attended  the  four  sessions  that  featured  the  finest  coaches  and  camp 
counselors  available. 

Maryland  assistants  George  Raveling,  Jim  Maloney  and  Joe  Harrington  along  with  trainer  Bill  Fry  are  regulars  on  the  camp 
staff. 

Camp  Counselors  1971 
(Professionals) 

Jack  Marin  —  Baltimore  Bullets 
Wes  Unsel  -  Baltimore  Bullets 
Jeff  Petrie  —  Portland  Trail  Blazers 
Walt  Szczerbiak  —  Pittsburgh  Condors 
Skeeter  Swift  —  Pittsburgh  Condors 
Dave  Bing  —  Detroit  Pistons 
Steve  Vacindek  —  Carolina  Cougars 
Arnold  "Red"  Auerbach  —  Boston  Celtics 

The  list  of  counselors  also  included  former  Maryland  stars,  Jay  McMillen,  Will  Hetzel,  Rod  Horst,  West  Virginia's  Mike 
Heitz  and  St.  John's  Greg  Cluess.  Dave  Freitag,  Boston  College;  Steve  Wendefer  of  Cincinnati,  Steve  Kaplan  of  Rutgers,  Jeff 
Dawson  of  Illinois  and  Tommy  Trice  of  Virginia  Tech  were  also  among  the  40  counselors  assisting  Coach  Driesell. 


George  Raveling  demonstrates  rebounding. 


Jeff  Dawson  works  on  form. 


Jim  Maloney  assists  with  shooting. 


Red  Auerbach  with  intent  campers  and  counselors. 


55 


DR.  CHARLES  EDWIN  BISHOP 

CHANCELLOR  COLLEGE  PARK  CAMPUS 

Dr.  Charles  Bishop,  as  the  first  Chancellor  of  the  College 
Park  Campus,  completed  his  first  year  of  administering  the 
34,500-student  campus  in  September. 

The  49  year  old  North  Carolina  educator  is  regarded  as  a 
"humanitarian"  who  "relates  well  to  students  and  faculty 
alike." 

Dr.  Bishop  came  to  the  University  of  Maryland  from  the 
Consolidated  University  of  North  Carolina,  Chapel  Hill, 
where  he  served  as  vice  president  for  research  and  public 
service  programs.  He  has  been  a  member  of  the  North 
Carolina  State  University  faculty  since  1950. 

He  received  a  doctor  of  philosophy  degree  in  economics 
from  the  University  of  Chicago  in  1952,  after  earning  his 
master's  degree  in  agricultural  economics  from  the  Univer- 
sity of  Kentucky  in  1948  and  his  bachelor  of  science  from 
Berea  College,  Kentucky  in  1946. 


DR.  WILSON  H.  ELKINS 

PRESIDENT,  UNIVERSITY  OF  MARYLAND 

The  twenty-first  president  of  the  University  of  Mary- 
land, Dr.  Wilson  H.  Elkins,  is  serving  his  seventeenth  year  in 
that  office.  He  came  to  Maryland  in  September  of  1954 
from  Texas  Western  College,  a  branch  of  the  University  of 
Texas  at  El  Paso.  He  previously  had  served  as  President  of 
San  Angelo  Junior  College. 

He  holds  B.A.  and  M.A.  degrees  from  the  University  of 
Texas  where,  as  an  undergraduate,  he  earned  eight  varsity 
letters  in  football,  basketball  and  track. 

His  B.Litt.  and  Ph.D.  degrees  are  from  Oxford  University 
where  he  studied  as  a  Rhodes  Scholar. 

President  Elkins'  administration  at  Maryland  has  been 
marked  by  great  growth  and  strengthening  of  academic 
standards.  Faced  with  skyrocketing  student  enrollment,  the 
University,  under  his  leadership,  has  consistently  sought  to 
provide  quality  education  for  an  increasing  number  of  stu- 
dents. 

Dr.  Elkins  serves  this  year  as  President  of  the  National 
Association  of  State  Universities  and  Land-Grant  Colleges; 
President,  Southern  University  Conference;  member  of  the 
Steering  Committee,  Education  Commission  of  the  States; 
and  Chairman  of  the  Board  of  Directors  of  the  Federal 
Reserve  Bank  of  Richmond.  He  is  a  member  of  the 
Southern  Regional  Education  Board,  is  past  President  of 
the  Middle  States  Association  of  Colleges  and  Secondary 
Schools,  and  recently  completed  a  term  of  office  as  Secre- 
tary of  the  American  Council  on  Education. 


UNIVERSITY 
OFFICIALS 


56 


ASSISTANT  DIRECTOR 


ALFRED  J.   HANLON 


ASSISTANT  DIRECTOR  OF  ATHLETICS 

Alfred  J.  Hanlon  is  concerned  primarily  with  prepara- 
tion and  supervision  of  athletic  budgets,  scheduling,  and 
organization  and  coordination  of  recruiting  programs. 

After  directing  the  Maryland  Air  Force  ROTC  program 
for  two  years,  Hanlon  retired  with  the  rank  of  colonel. 

A  native  of  Boston,  Hanlon  was  graduated  from  Harvard 
where  he  earned  a  varsity  letter  in  track. 

A  rated  command  pilot,  Hanlon  commanded  a  heavy 
bomber  squadron  in  Europe  during  World  War  II  and  has 
served  in  a  wide  variety  of  command  and  staff  positions 
since. 

Hanlon's  decorations  include  the  Legion  of  Merit,  the 
Air  Medal  with  two  oak  leaf  clusters,  the  Air  Force  Com- 
mendation Medal,  and  the  Presidential  Unit  Citation  Badge. 

Hanlon  is  married  to  the  former  Barbara  Foster  of 
Boston.  They  have  three  children,  Christopher,  28,  Brenda, 
26,  and  Mark,  24. 


DR.  JOHN   E.   FABER 

Chairman,  The  Athletic  Council 


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ATHLETIC  COUNCIL 

Dr.  John  E.  Faber,  Jr.  (Faculty  Chairman) 
Dr.  Donald  Maley  (Prof.  &  Head,  Ind.  Ed.) 
Dr.  John  M.  Dennis  (Head  Radiology,  Bait.) 
Dr.  Robert  M.  Ragan  (Head  Dept.  of  Civil  Engr.) 
Dr.  Norman  C.  Laffer  (Prof.  Arts  &  Sciences) 
Dr.  Richard  F.  Davis  (Prof.  &  Head,  Dairy  Science) 
Mr.  Howard  G.  Crist,  Jr.  (Pres.  Alumni  Association) 
Mr.  Madison  Jones  (President  SGA) 


First  appointed  to  the  athletic  council  in  1951,  Dr.  Faber  has  served  as  its  chairman  since  1 963.  Dr. 
Faber  is  the  University's  representative  to  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference,  of  which  he  was  president 
last  year. 

Dr.  Faber  is  professor  emeritus  of  the  microbiology  department.  During  his  36-year  tenure  as 
lacrosse  coach,  Maryland  won  five  national  championships  and  shared  two  others. 


57 


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59 


University  of  Maryland 


The  University  of  Maryland  is  a  land-grant  institution  of 
higher  learning  stressing  programs  of  excellence  in  teaching, 
research  and  service. 

Now  in  its  165th  year,  the  University  is  one  of  the  10 
largest  universities  in  the  nation,  with  over  37,000  students 
enrolled  in  its  on-campus  daytime  programs.  An  additional 
48,000  are  enrolled  in  the  fiscally  self-sustaining  programs 
of  University  College,  which  maintains  centers  for  adult 
education  throughout  the  State  and  in  24  foreign  countries. 
The  teaching  and  research  staff  includes  more  than  6,000 
full-time  and  part-time  personnel. 

Undergraduate  curricula  are  offered  in  over  120  fields, 
master's  degrees  in  77  departments  and  doctoral  degrees  in 
74  departments.  In  the  number  of  doctorates  granted 
annually,  the  University  ranks  among  the  top  30  institu- 
tions in  the  nation. 

The  University  had  its  beginnings  in  1807  with  the  estab- 
lishment in  Baltimore  of  the  College  of  Medicine,  an 
entirely  faculty-owned  institution  granting  the  M.D.  degree. 
Five  years  later  its  name  was  changed  to  the  University  of 
Maryland,  and  it  was  given  power  to  confer  additional 
degrees.  Subsequently,  the  University  opened  a  School  of 
Dentistry  (1840),  the  first  such  school  in  the  world,  and 


then  added  Schools  of  Pharmacy  (1871),  Law  (1882)  and 
Nursing  (1889). 

The  College  Park  campus  of  the  University  was  opened 
in  1859  as  the  Maryland  Agricultural  College  under  a 
charter  secured  in  1856  by  a  group  of  Maryland  planters. 
After  a  disastrous  fire  in  1912,  the  State  acquired  control 
of  the  College  and  bore  the  costs  of  rebuilding.  In  1920  the 
State  took  over  the  faculty-owned  University  in  Baltimore, 
merging  it  with  the  State-owned  institution  at  College  Park 
to  form  the  presentday  University  of  Maryland. 

In  1886  the  Delaware  Conference  Academy  was  founded 
by  the  Methodist  Church  in  Princess  Anne,  Maryland.  The 
institution  was  taken  over  by  the  State  of  Maryland  in  1926 
and  became  a  division  of  the  University  of  Maryland  in 
1948.  Formerly  known  as  Maryland  State  College  it  is  now 
known  as  the  University  of  Maryland  Eastern  Shore. 

Presently  located  in  the  College  Park  campus  are  the 
College  of  Agriculture,  Arts  and  Sciences,  Business  and 
Public  Administration,  Education,  Engineering,  Home 
Economics,  and  Physical  Education,  Recreation  and  Health; 
University  College;  School  of  Architecture;  Graduate 
School;  School  of  Library  and  Information  Services;  and 
Summer  School.  There  are  also  a  number  of  institutes, 
bureaus    and    service    programs.    On    the    Baltimore  City 


60 


campus  there  are  the  Schools  of  Dentistry,  Law,  Medicine, 
Nursing,  Pharmacy,  and  Social  Work;  the  Psychiatric  Insti- 
tute; Center  for  the  Study  of  Trauma;  and  University 
Hospital.  A  third  campus  was  opened  in  1966  just  west  of 
Baltimore  City  -  the  University  of  Maryland,  Baltimore 
County  (UMBC). 

The  research  programs  at  the  University  derive  their 
existence  and  vigor  from  a  faculty  comprised  of  interna- 
tionally recognized  scholars  and  scientists.  Exceptional 
research  facilities  include  the  Institute  for  Child  Study,  the 
National  Resources  Institute,  a  laboratory  for  basic 
behavioral  research,  Van  de  Graaff  accelerators,  an  assort- 
ment of  modern  computers,  a  nuclear  reactor,  wind  tunnel, 
a  psycho-pharmacology  laboratory,  laboratory  models  for 
meteorological  phenomena,  and  collaborative  arrangements 
with  many  nearby  government  installations.  A  new, 
pioneering,  spiral  ridge  cyclotron  was  completed  in  1968.  In 
addition,  the  University  of  Maryland  is  a  member  of  the 
initial  group  of  34  universities  incorporated  to  manage  a 
new  200  BeV  high  energy  accelerator  at  Weston,  Illinois. 

University  libraries  include  more  than  a  million  volumes 
on  the  College  Park  and  Baltimore  City  campuses,  plus 
nearly  half  a  million  microtexts,  slides,  film  strips,  nega- 
tives, prints,  music  scores,  and  recordings.  The  University  is 
a  regional  depository  for  Federal  documents.  Special  collec- 
tions include  the  Marylandia,  Katherine  Anne  Porter,  Rare 
Book,  East  Asian,  and  Health  Sciences  Historical 
Collections. 

In  recent  years  the  University  of  Maryland  has  received 
national  recognition  in  numerous  areas.  In  1964  it  estab- 
lished a  chapter  of  Phi  Beta  Kappa.  In  1969  the  Association 
of  American  Universities  elected  the  University  to  its 
selective  membership. 

In  research,  scholarship  and  in  the  number  and  quality 
of  its  graduates,  the  University  is  a  productive  member  of 
the  community  of  great  state  universities. 


*\ 


Student  assistants  in  sports  information  office  are  dedicated 
workers  and  sports  enthusiasts.  From  left  Larry  Strickling, 
Walt  Atkins,  Steve  Zaks. 


TRAINER  -WILLIAM  FRY 

William  "Spider"  Fry,  a  1951  graduate  of  the  University, 
returned  to  his  alma  mater  in  March,  1967,  as  Head  Trainer 
of  Athletics.  He  had  served  for  five  years  in  a  similar  capa- 
city at  Dartmouth  College. 

As  an  undergraduate,  Fry  earned  his  letter  in  varsity 
soccer  and  a  B.S.  degree  in  Physical  Education.  He  was  an 
assistant  trainer  for  several  years  before  becoming  head 
trainer  at  Dartmouth  in  1962.  He  was  director  of  District 
III  for  the  National  Athletic  Trainers  Association  in  1958. 

Spider  and  Sandy  (Penn  State  '61)  have  one  daughter, 
Elizabeth  Kay,  who  has  just  turned  four. 


SEASON  HIGHS  1970-1971 

MOST  POINTS:  38  by  Howard  White  ag  South  Carolina  (setting  new  CAROLINA  COLISEUM  REC.) 

MOST  REBOUNDS:   18  by  Still  ag  North  Carolina  State 

MOST  FIELD  GOAL  ATT.:  28  by  Howard  White  ag  Georgetown 

MOST  FIELD  GOALS:   15  by  Howard  White  ag  Georgetown 

MOST  FREE  THROWS:    1 5  by  Jim  O'Brien  ag  Duke 

MOST  FREE  THROW  ATT:   18  by  Jim  O'Brien  ag  Duke 

MOST  ASSISTS:  9  by  Howard  White  ag  Georgetown 

BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PCT.:   1000  by  Jim  O'Brien  ag  South  Carolina  at  CP  (5/5) 


TEAM  HIGHS 

MOST  REBOUNDS:  69  ag  Loyola  in  Baltimore  Civic  Center 

MOST  FIELD  GOALS:  44  ag  Miami  in  Cole  Field  House 

MOST  PERSONAL  FOULS:  25  ag  North  Carolina  and  Georgetown 

MOST  FREE  THROWS:  34  ag  North  Carolina  in  Cole  Field  House 

MOST  FREE  THROW  ATT.:  47  ag  North  Carolina  in  Cole  Field  House 

MOST  FIELD  GOALS  ATT.:  93  ag  Miami  in  Cole  Field  House 

BEST  FIELD  GOAL  PCT.:  .789  ag  South  Carolina  in  Cole  Field  House  (15/19) 

BEST  FREE  THROW  PCT.:   .933  ag  Wake  Forest  (14/15) 

NOTE:   Barry  Yates  made  first  10  shots  against  Miami  (NEW  MARYLAND  RECORD  FOR 
CONSECUTIVE  FIELD  GOALS)  and  finished  the  game  13/15. 
1 1 1  points  by  Team  against  Miami  is  NEW  MARYLAND  SCORING  RECORD 
63  points  in  second  half  against  Miami  TIES  MARYLAND  RECORD  for  most  points 
in  one  half. 


62 


James  D.  Morgan  —  Public  Address  Announcer 


The  Terp  Cheerleaders 


63 


HALL  OF   FAME 


The  first  two  high  school  uniforms  to  be  displayed  in  the  National  Basketball  Hall  of 
Fame  are  received  by  Lee  Williams,  Executive  Director.  Tom  McMillen's  55  and  Tom 
Roy's  45  have  been  retired  by  their  high  schools. 


Porac  and  McMillen  help  Raveling  check  times 


MILE  AND   HALF  RUN 


Terps  opened  practice  at  12:03  A.M.  on  October 
15,  the  first  team  in  the  nation  to  begin,  as  the  entire 
squad  including  freshmen  ran  a  mile  and  a  half  in 
Byrd  Stadium.  Several  hundred  students,  and  various 
news  media  turned  out  for  the  run  including  a  tele- 
vision crew  from  WMAL-TV.  Rich  Porac  ran  an  8:1 1 
for  the  fastest  time,  to  win  his  heat,  while  Tom 
McMillen  won  his  heat  in  8:41.  Freshmen  Rodney 
Headley,  a  winning  8:30  and  Varick  Cutler  8:23  for 
second  to  Porac  were  other  top  times.  Bob  Bodell  was 
timed  in  8:32. 


64 


Cole  Field  House 
1966  &   1970   NCAA  FINALS 


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